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San-Diego Zoo

INTRODUCTION

We humans have had a long association with wild animals. For all but

the last few thousand years of our two million years, we have depended on

them for our very existence. We were hunters in our early days, drifting

along with the game herds, dipping into that seemingly inexhaustible river

of life for our food and clothing. When the herds prospered, we are well;

when hard times came on them, our bellies shrank. So close was our

relationship with wild animals, we called them our brothers.

The Chinese and Egyptians were the first to establish collections of

wild animals. About five thousand years ago, Chinese emperors maintained

animal parks for their private use, usually hunting. The Pharaohs of Egypt

sent expeditions into the interior of Africa to collect animals for royal

menageries. Later, Roman legions sent back wild animals, along with human

slaves, from their conquests. Often these two – animals and humans – ended

up pitted against each other in gladiatorial battles for their captors’

entertainment.

The first true zoo was built in France by Louis XIV, but it was modern

only in comparison with what had existed before. Louis’ wild animals were

housed in champed, dirty cages, often by themselves, and fed food which

rarely approximated their natural diet. Mortality rates were high, but

little attention was given to this; dead animals could be replaced easily

from the rivers of wildlife still flowing in the wilderness.

At the turn of the 20th century the first modern zoo was designed and

built at Stellingen, near Hamburg, Germany. It had a minimum of cages and

barred enclosures; animals were exhibited in large, “natural” surroundings

of artificial mountains, plains and caves, usually with others of their

species.

THE HISTORY

And now I want to tell you about the most famous zoo in the world –

The San-Diego Zoo.

In Began with a Roar

The San Diego Zoo, established in 1916, was far different from today's

grand; exotic, zoological garden. For the most part, it grew from a small

collection of animals held in traditional circus like cages that formed a

portion of the city's 1915-1916 Panama-California International Exposition

held in Balboa Park. After the close of the Exposition, a San Diego

physician, Dr. Harry Wegeforth, rescued these animals and started the

present Zoo. He would later recall how it all began:

On September 16, 1916, as I was returning to my office after

performing an operation at St. Joseph Hospital, I drove down Sixth Avenue

and heard the roaring of the lions in the cages at the Exposition then

being held in Balboa Park.

I turned to my brother, Paul, who was riding with me, and half

jokingly, half wishfully, said, "Wouldn't it be splendid if San Diego had a

zoo! You know ...I think I'll start one."

Wegeforth's idea, with the help of other interested San Diegans, would

take shape and prosper over the years. Even as a child, growing up in

Baltimore, Maryland, he was fascinated by animals. He regularly staged

"circuses" in his backyard, using toy animals and stitched-together flour

sacks for a "big top" tent. This interest went far beyond normal childish

play, because young Harry had done extensive research on the real-life

behavior and characteristics of his animal menagerie and enthusiastically

explained all of this to visitors at his "performances."

Later on, as an adult, Wegeforth obtained a medical degree and moved

to San Diego in 1908 to set up his practice. The work of building the Zoo,

however, was soon to consume almost all of his time. It was a gamble and a

dream that he lived daily, but a task he relished.

Together with four other men—Dr. Paul Wegeforth, Dr. Fred Baker, Dr.

Joseph H. Thompson, and Frank Stephens—Wegeforth founded the Zoological

Society of San Diego on October 2,1916. In 1921, the City of San Diego

granted the Society its present home in Balboa Park, and, by 1922,

Wegeforth, a few staff members, and a small collection of animals had begun

moving in.

Even at this early date, Wegeforth was promoting a zoo that was

different from most in existence at that time, including demerits that

would, as years passed, result in its being called the "world's greatest

zoo." For example, he envisioned a zoological garden where animals could be

integrated with plants in pleasing settings with no bars or traditional

cages to obstruct a visitor's view. He promoted the idea of grotto and moat

enclosures—something just being tried in European zoos and almost unknown

in America.

While riding around the Zoo grounds on his Arabian stallion, Wegeforth

would map out in his mind the location of exhibits. Mesas would hold hoofed

mammals, reptiles, and birds; the canyons would be reserved for bears and

cats. In Johnny Appleseed fashion, he scattered and planted seeds for the

new plants he desired. Roads that were laid out for the first bus tours are

still used today.

To supplement the initial group of animals gathered from the Balboa

Park Exposition, Wegeforth made collecting trips to other countries and

other zoos, both here and abroad. His aggressive style of exchanging local

animals, such as rattlesnakes and California sea lions, for more exotic

species soon earned him the title of "Trader Wegeforth." Other animals were

donated to the Zoo from private individuals or Navy ships that docked in

San Diego and brought "gifts" to Dr. Harry's Zoo.

Through personal vision, determination, his own financial

contributions, and those of others, Harry Wegeforth created the San Diego

Zoo. To the uninformed observer of the time, it might have seemed that he

realized his dream from almost nothing. Indeed, some of the early exhibits

were built from castoffs and discards from other construction projects —

things that he could acquire for free4 much as he had built his play

menageries as a child. He cajoled local wealthy citizens to help him by

arousing their' concern for the animals and their city pride. One of his

greatest benefactors was newspaper heiress Ellen Browning Scripps, who, by

the time of her death, had donated some quarter of a million dollars to the

project.

Wegeforth's concern about animal nutrition and health is additionally

noteworthy. While not trained as a veterinarian, he nonetheless applied his

medical knowledge to the care of Zoo animals and brought in others trained

to assist him in this work. This care was reflected in the Zoo's low animal

mortality figures.

One day a tiger, writhing in pain with what his keepers suspected to

be intestinal problems, needed immediate treatment. As a result of his

condition, they considered him too dangerous to rope and tie down for

examination (this was an era before the tranquilizer dan gun). Wegeforth

sized up the situation and entered the animal's enclosure with a handful of

beneficial tablets. The animal crouched, made ready to leap, and opened his

gaping jaws to unleash a ferocious roar. At that instant Wegeforth tossed

several of the pills into his mouth. Surprised at this action, the tiger

backed off momentarily, swallowing the medicine. Not one to back down, the

tiger again gathered himself in a crouch, opened his cavernous mouth, and

prepared to pounce. Once more Wegeforth administered the medicine, and this

time the animal retired to his water basin to wash down the irritating

pills. Such examples of Wegeforth's "make do" philosophy of animal medicine

made for popular conversation among early Zoo employees.

In April of 1927, just over ten years after the Zoo's founding, he

succeeded in opening the Zoological Hospital and Biological Research

Institute, a major contribution to the further achievements of the San

Diego Zoo. This facility was yet another gift from Miss Scripps.

The Zoo Lady

Also in 1927, the Zoological Society hired its first executive

secretary, Mrs. Belle Benchley, an individual who would share Wegeforth's

dream and assist him with his goals and plans. She had come to the

organization as a bookkeeper in 1925, but soon proved so adept that

Wegeforth began using her as his primary assistant. Among other things, he

encouraged her to be the Zoo's public relations spokesperson, speaking at

civic luncheons—a job she did reluctantly at first but soon mastered. Her

work earned her high praise over the years, and following Wegeforth's death

in 1941, she took over management of the Zoo.

It was in large part due to Mrs. Benchley that the San Diego Zoo began

to achieve a national, even worldwide, prominence. Her books about life at

the Zoo, published during the 1940s, made many new friends for the

organization. They included My Life in a Man-made Jungle (1940), My Friends

the Apes (1942), My Animal Babies (1945), and Shirley Visits the Zoo

(1946). Mrs. Benchley's continued care and concern for the Zoo animals'

welfare prompted one zoo expert to remark that the San Diego Zoo was "the

only zoo in the world that is run for the animals."

Among Mrs. Benchley's more famous accomplishments was the arrival at

the Zoo in 1949 of Albert, Bata, and Bouba, a male and two female western

lowland gorillas from French West Africa. All less than a year old, these

gorilla babies captured the hearts of San Diegans, who lined up by the

hundreds to see them. Their first day on exhibit a crowd of some 10,000

arrived, setting a new Zoo attendance record.

The Schroeder Years

Following the retirement of Mrs. Benchley in 1953, Dr. Charles

Schroeder became director of the Zoological Society in January of 1954. He

was the Zoo's first leader with a scientific background in animal care. Dr.

Schroeder received his doctor of veterinary medicine degree from Washington

State University in 1929 and had initially been hired at the Zoo as a

veterinarian/ pathologist in 1932. But, as he often recalled, he performed

many other duties as well, such as taking photographs to sell to visitors

as postcards.

It was through Dr. Schroeder's vision and persistence that the San

Diego Zoo's sister facility, the San Diego Wild Animal Park, came into

existence and later opened to the public in 1972. As director of the Zoo

until 1972, he was also responsible for many other now well-known Zoo

attractions, including the Skyfari aerial tramway, the Children's Zoo, and

the moving sidewalk or escalator. He further increased the Zoo's commitment

to research and remodeled its hospital.

It was also during this period that the local television show

"Zoorama" was created, with its first airing in January 1955. Later

syndicated nationally, the program brought the San Diego Zoo into the homes

of millions of viewers across the nation.

Into the Present

The history of the San Diego Zoo in recent years has been one of a new

awareness of the role of zoos in our world. Under the able leadership of

new directors and members of the board of trustees, the Zoo has become

increasingly concerned with captive breeding and the conservation of

wildlife. Consequently, a number of conservation projects have been

established, both at the Zoo and Wild Animal Park as well as elsewhere

around the world. The first international conference on the role of zoos in

conservation was hosted by the San Diego Zoo in 1966, during the

celebration of the Zoo's 50th birthday. In addition, the Zoological Society

presented its first conservation awards that year.

Perhaps the most outstanding of the Zoo's conservation projects has

been the Center for Reproduction of Endangered Species (CRES). Launched in

1975 as an intensive research effort to improve the health and breeding

success of exotic animals, CRES is dedicated to its primary goal of helping

endangered species of animals reproduce and survive, both in captivity and

in the wild.

Some of the achievements CRES is most proud of have included

gratifying reproductive successes with cheetahs, Indian and southern white

rhinoceroses, and Przewalski's wild horses.

THE ANIMALS OF EURASIA

Eurasia is the largest land mass on earth, stretching halfway around

the globe from the British Isles to the Pacific Ocean, and from the Bering

Sea south to the tip of Malaysia, an area of 54 million sq km (21

million:sq -л»ХА few of its animal species, especially those in the north,

are closely related to, and in some instances are the same as, those of

North America.

Relatively recently, as earth time is measured, Eurasia was linked to

America by a land bridge which spanned what is now the Bering Straits. This

causeway existed for thousands of years during the Ice Ages, when much of

the earth's water was locked up in glaciers, thus lowering sea level.

Animals crossed back and forth between the two continents on the land

bridge, and the first human settlers in America probably arrived via this

route.

About ten thousand years ago, the latest in a series of ice ages came

to an end. The ice melted; the seas rose, and the Bering land bridge was

submerged. Animal species which had wandered west into Eurasia or east to

America were isolated from their native homelands. But because ten thousand

years is a mere eye wink in evolutionary timekeeping, very few changes have

had time to take place in these exiles. For example, the largest member of

the deer family lives in the taiga of both Eurasia and America. In Eurasia

it is called an elk, in America, a moose. But it is one and the same

animal. This is also true of another deer, the caribou, or reindeer. The

former is a wild animal of America; the latter has been domesticated for

centuries by the Lapps of northern Europe.

The Bering land bridge was probably responsible for the survival of at

least one species — the horse. This animal originated in the western

hemisphere, where it developed from a tiny, three-toed creature, to the

form very much like the one we know today. During the Ice Ages, it migrated

across the land bridge into Asia, where it thrived. In America the horse

became extinct and didn't reappear here until the Spaniards brought it back

as a domesticated animal in the 16th century.

The Spanish horses, as are all domestic breeds, were descendants of

the wild horses which migrated from America. That original breed still

exists. It is called Przewalski's horse, named for the naturalist who first

brought specimens to Europe from the grasslands of Mongolia. This is the

only true wild horse left in the world. All other so-called "wild" horses

are feral animals, that is, horses descended from domestic animals which

escaped from or were released by their owners. Przewalski's horses once

existed in large herds, but human intrusion into their habitat pushed them

farther and farther back into a harsh environment where even these tough

animals could not survive.

They were last seen in the wilderness in 1967. Fortunately breeding

groups existed in zoos and reserves. Captive propagation brought the

population up to about 700 by 1985, and four dozen Przewalski's horses have

been born at the San Diego Zoo and the San Diego Wild Animal Park. Several

of the Zoological Society's Przewalski's horses are on breeding loans to

other zoos.

The Eurasian bison, called a wisent, is closely related to the

American bison. Although never so numerous as the American member of the

species, wisent used to roam the forests which covered western Europe.

Centuries of cutting destroyed all but a small remnant of these forests and

came within 17 animals of exterminating the wisent. A captive breeding

program saved them and today a few hundred live in the Bialowieza Forest in

eastern Poland. The San Diego Zoo has produced 25 calves.

If the felling of Europe's forests meant the destruction of many wild

animal species, it worked to the advantage of others. Deer, for instance,

have thrived and live from the British Isles eastward. Red, roe and fallow

deer live in western Europe, sika deer in Japan. Pere David's deer,

formerly a native of marshy areas in central China, is extinct in the wild.

It exists only in zoos and reserves.

The hedgerows of western Europe house many small animal species. There

are foxes, rabbits, hares, badgers, ferrets, squirrels and birds. These and

other animals have adapted to life in a human-dominated environment.

Starlings and sparrows, for example, do so well that they are considered

"pest" birds. Until recently, one of Europe's largest birds, the white

stork, even nested in the smaller towns and villages. The bird was

considered a symbol of good luck, and home-owners built platforms on

rooftops for its nests. This practice is no longer common and the stork

avoids the towns.

The most regal of Eurasia's raptors is the golden eagle, and the bird

has figured in history for centuries. Its image was carried by Roman

legions as they conquered much of the continent. During the Middle Ages,

lesser members of royalty were free to use other raptors for falconry, but

the eagle was reserved for the king. Today, in more remote parts of Asia,

the golden eagle is used to hunt wild goats, gazelles, foxes, and wolves.

The bird occurs in the United States, where it is under federal protection.

It can be seen in San Diego's back country and often is observed soaring

over the San Diego Wild Animal Park.

Several other northern Eurasia predators are found in North America —

falcons, hawks and owls; mammals including wolves, wolverines and foxes. a

However, two mammalian predators are unique to I the Old World —

leopards and tigers. Leopards range i from northern Asia into Africa;

tigers live only in Asia I from Manchuria southward into India and

Malaysia. There are five races of this great cat; all of them are

endangered. The Zoo enjoys considerable success breeding and raising

Siberian tigers, of which the total world population is only about 750

individuals. More than two dozen cubs have been born and raised at the Zoo.

South of the taiga, Eurasian biomes become less clearly defined. Much

of the area is flat and treeless. In the west, where rainfall is adequate,

grass grows thickly. But deep in the continent's interior, the land becomes

a desert. Here, thousands of miles from the moderating effects of the

ocean, temperatures can climb well above 38°C (100°F) in summer, and

plummet far below freezing in winter.

Animals must make drastic adjustments to these climatic extremes. One

of the most common is migration. Herders move their domestic herds and

flocks, following the seasons, and many of the wild grazers also make

similar journeys, with predators following along.

The animals which are permanent residents have adapted to the heat,

cold and aridity of this area. The saiga, an antelope-like animal, has

nostrils pointing downward to help keep out dust. Inside each of its

nostrils the saiga has a sac which is believed to warm and moisten the air.

The Bactrian camel of Mongolia and China has adapted to its

environment by growing a thick, shaggy, winter coat; broad, split hooves to

keep from sinking into the sand; and two humps for storing fat when

foraging is poor.

Several species of wild asses are native to the interior of central

Asia. Among these are the Mongolian kulan and Iranian onager. Asses are

smaller than true horses and characterized by long ears, deep-set eyes

coarse, wiry manes, small feet and tails tipped with long hairs. They can

survive longer without water than other members of the horse family and are

able to get along on a small amount of food. Because of their sure-

footedness and endurance they are valuable beasts of burden and have been

domesticated for centuries.

The Eurasian grassland is home to the heaviest of all flying birds,

the 20 kg (45 lb) great bustard. And the world's smallest crane, the

demoiselle which stands just 1 m (39 in) tall, breeds on grasslands from

southeastern Europe into central Asia.

Several species of wild sheep and goats live on the grasslands and

adjacent mountains. Markhors and turs, both goats, range from Spain to

India and northward into Mongolia and Siberia. The tahr, a goatlike animal,

is found in the high Himalayas. Goats differ from sheep in that they have

beards, feet with scent glands, convex foreheads, and a definite odor among

the males.

Some of the world's most unusual mammals live in the mountains which

separate central Asia from India. One of the best known is the giant panda,

once considered a member of the raccoon family and now thought to be

related to bears. This animal lives on a diet consisting mainly of bamboo

shoots. For unknown reasons the bamboo is dying, which threatens the

pandas' future. The Chinese government has commissioned a team of

biologists to study the situation. Although giant pandas have rarely

reproduced in western zoos, a number of babies have been born in the

Beijing zoo through natural conception, and artificial insemination has

recently been successful.

The giant panda shares its bamboo forest with the lesser panda. This

animal looks like a raccoon but is related to the giant panda.

Central Asia is isolated from India and Burma by the Himalaya mountain

range, the highest mountains on earth. The area is so remote that little is

known about the behavior of many of its animals. It is the home of a collie-

sized gazelle, several species of wild sheep, and a member of the cow

family, the yak. The yak is also domesticated and has been a beast of

burden and supplier of milk, wool and fuel for many centuries.

One of the most beautiful of all Himalayan animals is the snow

leopard, or ounce. Its fur is in great demand and poaching has placed it in

grave danger of extinction.

The snow leopard's main prey is the bharal, or blue sheep, which lives

in the Himalayas and other high mountains in eastern Asia.

As one moves south from the high country, the character of the land

and its animals change. Rugged mountains give way to forested foothills.

This country is the northern edge of the sloth bear's range which also

includes other parts of India and Sri Lanka (Ceylon). Termites are a part

of the sloth bear's diet, and it sucks them in by a "vacuuming" process.

The bear rips open the termites' nest with its claws, then blows away the

dirt and dust, and starts sucking. Its lips protrude; its nostrils close to

keep out dirt.

Beyond the foothills, seasonal forests give way to semi-arid plains

and desert in India. Axis deer, nilgai (India's largest antelope) and

blackbuck live here. In the Gir Forest is the last remnant population of

the lions which once roamed from the Atlantic through the Near East and

into Asia. But lions have been gone from most of this range for many

centuries and exist today only in a protected reserve in the tiny Gir

Forest in western India, where a few hundred individuals survive.

Where one finds lions and other predators, scavengers will also be

found. In India they include striped hyenas, foxes, dholes (wild dogs), and

Indian white-backed vultures. These animals perform a vital function in the

balance of nature, cleaning up carrion left by the hunters, thus helping to

prevent the spread of disease.

Still farther south lies India's tropical forest, actually two of them

— a rain forest and a seasonally deciduous forest. They are home to a large

variety of monkeys, mainly of two groups — the short-tailed, stout-bodied

macaques, which are primarily terrestrial, and the long-tailed, slender-

bodied arboreal langurs.

The macaques include the rhesus monkey of India, sacred to the Hindus,

and critical to science. The existence of the Rh blood factor was first

demonstrated in rhesus monkeys, and a rhesus was the first living being

shot into space in the United States' space program. In Europe, the only

wild monkeys are the Barbary apes, actually macaques, of Gibraltar. Legend

has it that when these animals disappear — there are approximately 30 of

them — Britain's reign over the Rock will come to an end.

The second large group of Asian monkeys, the lan-gurs, are also called

leaf-eating monkeys. There are more than a dozen species, among which the

douc langur is considered to be one of the most beautiful of all monkeys.

The word "douc" means "monkey" in Vietnamese.

Three of the surviving five species of rhinoceroses live in

southeastern Asia. Two, the Sumatran and Javan rhinos, could be extinct in

the wild. The third, the Indian rhino, exists in small numbers in Assam.

Because of the heavy folds of skin and the bumps, called tubercules, on its

hips and shoulders, this rhino appears to be wearing a suit of armor.

The Chinese believe that rhino blood, urine, and horn (which is not a

true horn at all, but is composed of hair-like material) have medicinal and

aphrodisiacal powers. This superstition has resulted in heavy poaching of

rhinos, placing them in grave danger.

Among the better-known snakes of southeastern Asia are the Indian and

king cobras and the pythons. A king cobra can measure 3.5 m (12 ft) or

more. It feeds mainly on other snakes. The closely related Indian, or

Asian, cobra is appreciably smaller. The pythons are non-venomous

constrictors. Contrary to popular belief they do not crush their victims to

death but, through constriction, cause death through suffocation.

Southeastern Asia is the home of some of the showiest of all birds —

the pheasants. Although native to Asia, they have been introduced elsewhere

and now are among the most widely distributed of birds. One of the most

widespread is the ringneck pheasant. An old legend claims that ringnecks

were introduced into Greece by Jason, famous for his quest of the golden

fleece. Ringnecks were brought to the United States in the mid-1800's and

are now game birds. Several species of pheasants are exhibited at the Zoo,

two of them roaming freely on the grounds.

The first is the blue peafowl. The male, called a peacock, is the

traditional symbol of vanity and false pride because of its almost constant

displaying and strutting. The peafowl has been semi-domesticated for ages.

A Greek myth relates how the bird got the eye-like spots on its tail. The

peacock was a favored pet of Juno, wife of Jupiter. She became angry at her

one-hundred-eyed servant, Argus, because of a misdeed on his part. To

punish him and to make sure the world remembered his offense, she snatched

out his hundred eyes and scattered them on the tail of her pet peacock.

There they remain to this day.

The other pheasant that wanders the Zoo grounds is the junglefowl. It

looks much like a domestic chicken — understandably since it is the

chicken's ancestor.

Anthropologists think the chicken was first domesticated about 4000

B.C. as a fighting bird. Evidence suggests that the first chickens in the

New World came with Polynesian sailors. The most ornamental of all domestic

chickens are the long-tailed birds bred by the Japanese, some having tail

feathers 6 m (20 ft) long.

The hot, humid rain forests of southeastern Asia hold a profusion of

wildlife, much of it arboreal. Among these tree dwellers, primates reign,

and within this group, the anthropoid — manlike — apes are royalty. Two of

earth's four kinds of manlike apes live in southeastern Asia.

The smallest and most agile of these are the gibbons and siamangs.

These apes are light-bodied, long-armed and have long, slender hands. Their

generic name, Hylobates, means "tree dweller." They are truly champion

acrobats, swinging hand over hand and leaping more than 9 m (30 ft) from

one branch to the next. On large branches they usually walk upright,

holding their arms aloft for balance. Gibbons live in family groups of two

to six animals within well defined territories. Their morning whooping,

often heard at the Zoo, is a territorial call to warn off other gibbons.

The second anthropoid of southeastern Asia is the slow, retiring orangutan.

Its name means "old man of the forest," and the orang does seem the most

human of the apes. Unlike the gibbon, it is a loner. The species used to be

widespread throughout the islands of southeastern Asia but extinction came

early on all but Borneo and Sumatra. If we read the evidence correctly,

prehistoric man hunted orangutans for food and could have been partly

responsible for their disappearance from most of the range. Today fewer

than 5,000 individuals remain, and despite strenuous efforts to save them,

their numbers continue to drop. The forests they need are falling to the

ax, so if the species survives, it will be in zoos and wildlife reserves.

Among the rain forest's arboreal creatures, there are a number of

interesting "flying" animals — snakes, frogs and lizards. None of these

animals actually flies. They glide with varying degrees of aerodynamic

facility. The snake spreads its ribs and arches its body to produce a crude

airfoil that allows it to glide at a steep angle. The other animals have

folds and strips of skin which, when stretched, produce taut membranes that

slow descent.

The second largest of all land animals, the Asian elephant, lives in

the tropical forest. A bull can weigh 5,000 kg (11,000 Ib) and stand 2.5 to

3 m (8 to 10 ft) tall at the shoulders. Asian elephants have been

domesticated for centuries — for riding, war, and as beasts of burden.

The Asian elephant's only natural enemy is the tiger. Although this

cat attacks elephants, especially calves, it also preys on just about

anything it can catch, including the crocodiles that live in the forest's

sluggish rivers. One of its chief prey is the Malay tapir.

Tapirs originated in the New World, crossed on the land bridge into

Asia and now exist on both continents. The obvious difference between Old

World and New World tapirs is the large, white saddle-shaped patch of hair

on the Malay tapir's body. American tapirs are a solid brown color.

Of the many species of birds in the tropical forest, among the most

bizarre are the hornbills. There are 45 species, distributed throughout

tropical and subtropical Africa and Asia. One of the bird's more

fascinating behavioral habits is the manner of nesting. In most species of

hornbills, when the female is pregnant and ready to lay, she enters a

natural cavity in a tree. She and the male plaster over the cavity's

opening with a mixture of droppings, mud and regurgitated food. They leave

a narrow opening just wide enough for the female to poke her beak through,

but too small for predators to enter. The plastered wall hardens, and the

female, her eggs, and later the chicks, are safe. The male spends the time

feeding his mate. When the nestlings are half-grown, both parents chip away

the wall and the female emerges. She then helps her mate feed the baby

birds, which remain in the nest until they are fledged. During the time the

nest is occupied, it is kept clean and disease-free by insects and

microscopic scavengers.

THE ANIMALS OF THE AMERICAS

North and South America comprise the only continuous land mass that

reaches from the north to south polar regions, a distance of more than

14,500 km (9,000 mi). The combined area of the two continents is 41.4

million sq km (16 million sq mi), in which are found all terrestrial

biomes.

The two continents have been joined for the past two or three million

years. Earlier South America was an island, set apart from the northern

land mass for at least 60 million years. This gave time for animal species

unique to the continent to evolve. After the Isthmus of Panama emerged,

there was an interchange of animals between North and South America, much

as that experienced by Eurasia and America during the Ice Ages. One of the

animals found in both Eurasia and America is the polar bear. Its habitat is

along the entire Arctic coast. It has even been sighted hunting seals on

ice floes hundreds of miles at sea. The polar bear's heavy coat insulates

it from the icy water and air. Thick hair growing between its toes keep it

from slipping on the ice. The thick, white pelt made the animal a prized

trophy and reduced its population. The bear is now protected throughout its

range.

The musk ox, resident of the far north, also has had to be protected

from excessive hunting. At one time it came very close to extinction. A

member of the cow family, the musk ox has adapted to the bitter cold by

developing a heavy, shaggy coat consisting of two parts — a coarse outer

covering of long guard hairs and a soft inner coat so dense that neither

cold nor moisture can penetrate.

Musk oxen form a defensive ring when threatened. Adults stand along

the perimeter, heads and horns pointing out, and the calves cluster

together inside. This defensive posture works well against the ox's chief

enemy, wolves, but is of little avail when high-powered rifles are the

enemy.

Wolves prey on many species in the north — musk ox, caribou, moose,

deer, hares, and even rodents. These carnivores are among the most maligned

of all animals, victims of false myths and legends and systematic programs

of extermination. They are accused of attacking humans and destroying

entire herds of domestic animals. But their depredations of livestock are

less severe than often claimed. And unprovoked attacks by healthy wolves in

North America on humans are unknown. Those recorded from Europe's Middle

Ages are thought to have been made by rabid animals or hybrids.

The world will be a far lonelier place if the last wolf dies. As

biologist Ernest P. Walker wrote in his book, Mammals of the World, "The

howl of the wolf and coyote, which to some people is of more enduring

significance than superhighways and skyscrapers, should always remain a

part of our heritage."

Some Arctic wolves remain snow white year round, an adoption to their

environment. Three other predators of the far north— the snowy owl, Arctic

fox, and weasel— are white at least part of the year.

The life cycle of the snowy owl demonstrates the close relationship

which can exist between predator and prey. This owl hunts hares and

lemmings. When these mammals are plentiful, female owls lay clutches of

seven to ten eggs. When the food supply drops, only one to three eggs are

laid.

Lemmings are among the most plentiful animals of the far north. These

tiny rodents, found throughout the Arctic, are characterized by wide

fluctuations in population. When vegetation is plentiful, the lemmings'

numbers skyrocket. This population density seems to trigger a drive to

migrate. Hordes of lemmings move out. Nothing deters them — swamps,

forests, lakes, rivers. Eventually some reach the sea, which seems just one

more obstacle. They plunge in, swim out, and drown.

Each summer the far north comes alive with the millions of birds which

have migrated from the south to mate, build nests and raise their young.

Waterfowl make up the majority of these migrants. Shore birds, pelagic

birds, geese and ducks abound in the short Arctic summer. Some have come

thousands of miles. The champion migrant is the Arctic tern, which flies •

16,000 km (10,000 mi) from the Antarctic, and in autumn flies back again.

When the birds leave the Arctic at the end of summer, they follow

ancient flyways south. One of the flyways follows the Pacific coastline

from Alaska to California. Small ponds and estuaries along the coast

resound to the gabbling of hundreds of ducks.

The southern edge of North America's tundra borders on the taiga. Here

wildlife tends to stay on the forest's edge, in meadows, along streams, on

lakes and in old burns. Grass, sedges, and willows grow most profusely in

these openings.

The lakes of Wood Buffalo Park in Canada's taiga are the summer

nesting sites of the whooping crane, the rarest of all cranes and the

object of a decades-long conservation effort. In 1949 there were only 21

left out of a population which once ranged from the East Coast to the Rocky

Mountains. With complete protection, the population rose to 109 birds by

1979. Eighty-three lived in the wilderness; the others were captives.

Twice a year the wild birds migrate a hazardous 4,000 km (2,500 mi)

from their nesting grounds in Wood Buffalo Park to the Aransas Wildlife

Refuge on the Texas coast. The possibility of a major storm or devastating

disease striking this flock is a threat which makes biologists shudder. One

of the basic rules in the management of an endangered species is to spread

the risk. A daring experiment was undertaken with the whooping cranes. Eggs

were removed from nests in Wood Buffalo Park for artificial incubation and

placement under setting sandhill cranes, a related, more plentiful species.

The artificially incubated eggs are hatching and producing birds that are

raised in captivity. Several whooping cranes have been hatched and are

being raised by their foster parent sandhills in Idaho. If the experiment

succeeds, a new flock of whooping cranes will have been produced, one which

migrates a much smaller distance, over a different route, than the original

group. A fringe benefit of taking eggs is that it stimulates the female

bird to continue laying, thus generating more than the usual number of

clutches per year. The most common grazing animal of the American

coniferous and deciduous forests is the white-tailed deer. In the far West,

it is replaced by the mule deer. There are actually more deer now in North

America than when Europeans first arrived, because of the clearing of

forest land, plus game management.

Bears once occurred throughout the forests of America north of Mexico.

The world's largest is a brown bear, the Alaskan or Kodiak. The grizzly,

also a brown bear, has been known to launch unprovoked attacks against

humans.

American black bears are quite common in much of their range —

practically all the wooded areas of North America north of central Mexico.

They usually occur in their familiar black color phase, but also have been

known to be a cinnamon color, brown, and even blue. The rare blue or

glacier bear occurs only in southeastern Alaska, where there are about 500

left.

South of North America's taiga is the immense grassland known as the

Great Plains. This covers most of the continent's interior and stretches

3,900 km (2,400 mi) from southern Canada deep into Mexico. It is prairie

country, a seemingly flat land, devoid of trees excepting along the river

courses. Almost all of the original grasses were plowed under for the

raising of crops, and of the tremendous number of wild animals which once

lived there, practically nothing remains. As the naturalist Peter Farb

wrote, "Not even the eastern forests have suffered the almost complete

destruction that European man has brought to the grassland."

The story of the American pronghorn, the only "antelope" native to the

New World, illustrates his point. When Europeans first settled in the

Western Hemisphere, there were an estimated 50 to 100 million pronghorn on

the plains. Four centuries later by the turn of the 20th century, only

20,000 were left. Today, through strenuous conservation efforts, the prong-

horn is safe, although consigned to a small fraction of its former range.

Another example of what happened to the plains' wildlife concerns a

"dog." Before the Europeans came, hundreds of millions of rodents, called

prairie dogs because of their dog-like call, lived in underground "towns"

from southern Canada to Mexico. One such system of burrows in Texas covered

more than 65,000 sq km (25,000 sq mi) and contained approximately 400

million animals. With the coming of civilization, the burrows were plowed

under and the animals poisoned. Few prairie dog towns still exist.

As the prairie dogs disappear, they are taking with them at least one

of their predators, the black-footed ferret. This member of the weasel

family has prairie dogs as its prime food. It has become overspecialized

and is caught in an evolutionary trap.

North America's arid areas occur in the southwestern United States and

parts of Mexico. Large grazers and browsers include bighorn sheep, mule

deer and javelinas, also called peccaries. Hawks, foxes, owls, coyotes, and

several species of reptiles are among the carnivores. Among them, the

coyote is one of the few which has thrived in the face of human intrusion

into its habitat. Not only has it maintained its former range; it has

expanded it.

One of the resident birds of the North American southwest is the

roadrunner, a member of the cuckoo family. Primarily a ground bird, it can

run at speeds of up to 24 kmph (15 mph). Its diet consists of lizards and

other reptiles which it kills by repeated blows from its heavy beak. If

prey proves too large to swallow, the roadrunner ingests a bit at a time.

The birds can be seen dashing along the desert with snakes or lizards

hanging from their mouths.

The world's smallest owl, the 14 cm (5 1/2 in) high elf owl, also is a

resident of the American desert. This tiny predator uses the hollowed-out

nests of woodpeckers, located in cactuses, as its home.

The desert also has its reptiles, including many species of lizards,

plus two of the four poisonous snakes of North America — the rattlesnake

and coral snake.

Rattlesnakes are pit vipers, a group of reptiles which also includes

the fer-de-lance, bushmaster, water moccasin, and the copperhead The pit is

an opening below the snake's eyes which contains a heat-sensing organ.

Only two of North America's lizards are poisonous — the gila monster

and Mexican beaded lizard. Unlike poisonous snakes which inject their venom

through hollow fangs, these lizards bite their victims, hold on, and allow

poison to flow into the open wound from fangs which are grooved at the

rear.

The coastlands and adjacent lands of the United States are the habitat

of a wide variety of reptiles, birds and mammals. Water moccasins and

copperheads are found in the warmer portions, and the largest of all North

American reptiles, the alligator, lives in the rivers and bayous of the

southeast.

Alligators can be distinguished from the closely related crocodiles by

their broader heads and the lower teeth which are out of sight when the

mouth is closed. A crocodile's teeth are visible at all times.

There are no authenticated cases of wild alligators attacking humans.

Crocodiles, on the other hand, can attack people.

Many species of shorebirds live in North America. One of them, the

brown pelican, came close to extinction on the continent because of DOT.

The pesticide was sprayed and dusted on croplands, then percolated into the

ground water and was carried to sea where it entered the ocean's food

chain. The pelicans, being ultimate consumers, got heavy doses. Although

the chemical didn't kill them, it did weaken the shells of their eggs. The

result was few pelican hatchlings. After DDT was banned the pelican

population began to grow again. In 1979, 1,200 nests were counted in

California, a remarkable comeback.

Marine mammals of the U.S. Pacific coast include four species of

pinnipeds — members of the seal group. They are elephant seals, harbor

seals, Steller sea lions and California sea lions.

South of the United States and northern Mexico, the character of the

land and its wildlife changes. Desert, chaparral, and plains give way to

tropical forest. In places rainfall exceeds 500 cm (200 in) annually, and a

mild average temperature of 27°C (81°F) prevails.

As in most rain forests, primates dominate. In America they consist of

dozens of species of monkeys and marmosets. New World monkeys are only

distantly related to those of the Old World. Many species have prehensile

tails, a feaure lacking in the Old World monkeys. This "fifth hand" is

especially well developed in the spider monkey.

Not all of the rain forest's primates have prehensile tails. Marmosets

of the forests of Panama and the Amazon basin lack it. And the uakari has a

mere stub of a tail, making it the only short-tailed New World monkey.

South America is home to approximately 40 percent of the world's

birds, and most of them live in its rain forest. Two groups of rain forest

birds are among the most colorful in the world — the hummingbirds and

parrots.

Known as "living jewels," hummingbirds are found only in the New

World, where they live from southern Alaska to Tierra del Fuego. However,

they are primarily tropical birds. There are 319 known species which range

in size from the world's smallest bird, the 57 mm (2 1/2 in) long Cuban bee

hummer, to the giant hummingbird of the high Andes, measuring 216 mm (8 1/2

in) in length.

A second group of colorful rain forest birds, the parrots, are

distributed worldwide in the tropics and on all lands in the southern

hemisphere excepting the southern tip of Africa and some of the more remote

Pacific islands. In the New World, they reach northward into southern

Arizona and New Mexico, where they are represented by occasional visits of

the endangered thick-billed parrot.

The only parrot native to the United States is now extinct. In the

early 19th century, the Carolina parakeet ranged from North Dakota and

central New York south to eastern Texas and Florida. It was especially

abundant in the Mississippi River bottoms and along the Atlantic seaboard

The little bird was slaughtered for sport and to control its depredations

on fruit crops The last one was sighted m the Florida Everglades m the

early 1920 s

In addition to its wealth of birds, the South Amen can rain forest is

the home of a wide variety of other animals The world s slowest mammal, the

sloth which spends long periods hanging upside down from tree branches, is

a forest dweller So are opossums, anteaters, poisonous frogs, jaguars,

tapirs, and several snakes, among them the anaconda, the world s largest An

anaconda can measure more than 9 m (30 ft) in length Its prev includes the

world s largest rodent, the hog sized capybara, and the caiman, South

America s counterpart of the alligator

To the west, the rain forest terminates at the Andes, the mountain

ranges stretching the length of South America The highest point m the

western hemi sphere, 7,000 m (22,834 ft) tall Mt Aconcagua, is m the Andes

America s smallest deer, the pudu, and one of the world s largest

flying birds, the Andean condor, live in these mountains Probably the best

known of Andean animals are the guanacos, vicunas, llamas, and alpacas, New

World relatives of camels, which are found at high elevations. Llamas have

been domesticated as beasts of burden since pre-Columbian times; vicunas

and alpacas are prized for their high-quality wool.

The cold water off South America's west coast is rich with plankton, a

link in a food chain which reaches up through fish and ends with the

millions of sea birds living on the South American coast and nearby

islands. Among them, the guanay cormorant breeds in enormous numbers.

Cormorant rookeries are not particularly pleasant places for humans. They

reek of droppings, dead birds and regurgitated food, and there are flies

everywhere. The droppings, called guano, make a superb fertilizer and are

harvested commercially in Peru and Chile.

South America's grassland is called the pampas. Although similar to

the Great Plains of North America, the pampas never was home to the vast

herds of wild animals which once roamed North America.

One of the world's large, nonflying birds, the common rhea, lives on

the pampas. It was once hunted by gauchos on horseback for its tail plumes,

which were used as dusters. A second species, Darwin's rhea, roams the

Andean foothills from Peru to Bolivia and south to the Straits of Magellan.

It is an endangered species.

The pampas' predators include foxes, skunks, rattlesnakes, hawks, and

one which is found only in South America, the rare maned wolf. This mammal

looks more like a fox than like a wolf. It is solitary, nocturnal, and wide-

ranging. It hunts small mammals, birds, and reptiles and also eats fruits

and other plant material.

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