Woodland Park Zoo- PRESS RELEASE
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June 7, 2004 Zoo loses elderly ocelot Contact:
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SEATTLE - Woodland Park Zoo euthanized a 22-year-old endangered ocelot yesterday following a period of age-related declining health, and more recent lethargy and lack of appetite. Preliminary necropsy reports revealed developing symptoms of pneumonia. The small spotted cat, Sabrina, lived in the zoo’s award-winning Tropical Rain Forest. Ocelots may live up to 20 years in zoos and 10-13 years in the wild. The cat’s death leaves one ocelot, a 5-year-old female, remaining at the zoo. “Treatment options were not realistic for an ocelot in its twenties,” explained
zoo General Curator Dr. Nancy Hawkes. “Because her health was taking a
steady downturn, we opted to humanely euthanize her rather than subject her to
further discomfort,” added Hawkes. Ocelots are distributed throughout Mexico, Central and South America to northern Argentina, with remnant populations still in the southwestern United States. They may be found in several different kinds of habitats, from jungle areas and tropical rain forests to dry scrub and chaparral zones. The small cats are three to four times the size of an average domestic house cat, weighing on average 24-35 pounds and averaging 2_ to 5 feet in length. Accredited by the American Zoo and Aquarium Association, top award-winning Woodland Park Zoo is famed for pioneering naturalistic exhibits and setting a standard for zoos all over the world. With conservation, education and excellent animal care at the core of the zoo’s mission, the zoo is helping to save endangered species in Washington state and around the world including tree kangaroos, snow leopards, red-crowned cranes, African wild dogs, western pond turtles and Oregon silverspot butterflies. By inspiring visitors and others to care and act, Woodland Park Zoo is making a difference in our planet’s future.
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