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Wales Online
Wales Online
National
Lottie Kilraine & Kirstie McCrum

10,000 animals get on the scales in UK's largest zoo's annual weigh-in

More than 10,000 animals have jumped on the scales in the annual weigh-in at the UK's largest zoo. From light-as-a-feather wolf spiders to Ming Jung the 4,150kg Asian elephant, staff at Whipsnade Zoo near Dunstable in Bedfordshire have been kept busy carrying out the animal assessment.

Zookeepers were charged with gently coaxing animals of all sizes, including aardvarks, rhinos and spiders, to step onto the scales. One of the zoo’s larger residents, 26-year-old greater one-horned rhinoceros Beluki, stepped onto an industrial-sized weight scale after keepers enticed her with fresh vegetables.

The zoo’s endangered Asian elephant Ming Jung was offered his favourite healthy snacks to clamber on the scale. Once there, it was revealed that the 14-year-old weighs 4,150kg.

New arrival aardvarks Nacho and Terry took part in the annual weigh-in for the first time since they joined the conservation zoo. Another first-timer was a three-month-old Northern rockhopper penguin called Dobby.

The endangered youngster, who hatched in May, was raised by keepers who hand-fed the chick when her parents proved unable to look after her. Meanwhile, Whipsnade Zoo’s smallest inhabitants, including its butterflies and critically endangered desertas wolf spiders, required extra sensitive equipment to weigh them accurately.

Matthew Webb, the head of zoological operations, said the animals at the Zoo have “different personalities” which meant zookeepers have had to come up with “creative tactics” to entice the animals onto the scales.

“All of our animals at ZSL Whipsnade Zoo are weighed and measured regularly, but the annual weigh-in is an opportunity to review the information we’ve recorded and ensure it is up to date and accurate,” Mr Webb said. With so many animals with different personalities, the zookeepers have to come up with creative tactics to entice them onto the scales, from luring a 4150kg endangered Asian elephant like Ming Jung onto the scales in exchange for his favourite veggies, to encouraging a ring-tailed lemur to bounce onto the scales for a juicy, sweet pepper.”

As well as being a key tool to gauge the animals’ wellbeing, keepers can use the regular weight checks and waist measurements to identify pregnant animals, many of which are endangered species. Once every animal’s weight and measurements have been recorded, the numbers are put in a database called the Zoological Information Management System (ZIMS) which helps zookeepers around the world compare important information on thousands of endangered species.

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