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A Siberian tiger is killed on Nov. 18 by three fellow tigers in the Glacier Zoo in Shenyang, Liaoning Province due to severe lack of food this winter. (Source: chinanews.cn) Photo Gallery>>> |
SHENYANG, Nov. 19 (Xinhua) -- A Siberian tiger in a
zoo in northeast China was killed and eaten by four tigers it had lived with for
five years over the weekend.
The desperate tigers, which are supposed to be under the highest level of state protection in China, turned on the 12-year-old, 330-pound tiger and tore off its left leg on
Saturday afternoon at the privately-owned Shenyang Glacier Zoo in Shenyang,
capital of northeast China's Liaoning Province.
"When the keeper arrived, the four tigers were still
eating the dead body on the ground," said Li Wen Shui, deputy director of the
zoo's management office.
"I was shocked, particularly as the five tigers, who
were the same age, had been living together for five years. This kind of thing
has never happened before," he said.
A visitor to the zoo, Ling Xia Dan, witnessed the
aftermath of the attack.
"I saw the body lying on the ground with the left leg and left ear ripped off. I wouldn't have believed it was true if I hadn't seen it myself," she said.
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A Siberian tiger is killed on Nov. 18 by three fellow tigers in the Glacier Zoo in Shenyang, Liaoning Province due to severe lack of food this winter. (Source: chinanews.cn) Photo Gallery>>> |
Wen was quick to blame the killing on the zoo's
financial woes.
"The zoo is in a financial crisis and we haven't been
able to provide the tigers with sufficient food for the last two years.
"An adult tiger eats about 20 pounds of meat a day,
but the tigers here can barely get a chicken to quench their hunger every one or
two days," he admitted.
Fan Zhiyong, species program director with the WWF,
laid the blame squarely on the zoo's management.
"This kind of tragedy of tiger eats tiger is unheard
of. It rarely happens in the wild. It is obvious that the zoo's management
should be held responsible," he said.
The zoo keeps 300 state-level endangered animals such
as the white tiger, leopard and Asian elephant.
According to Wu Xi, secretary of the zoo's Communist
Party committee, the carnivores need 500 kilograms of meat a day, and fish
eaters, such as sea lions and seals, consume 120 kilograms offish.
But the zoo does not have the resources to match the
demand. It began to struggle to feed its 2,000 animals shortly after it opened
to the public in December 2000. One ravenous elephant angrily smashed through
the wall of its compound last year.
Wu said the revenue gained from entrance tickets -
around 1 million yuan (133,333 U.S. dollars) a year - was the zoo's only source
of income and way below the expenditure.
As a result, only animals like the elephant and the
giraffe have heating in their pounds. The temperature in the northeastern region
has remained resolutely below zero since winter arrived a month ago.
Visitors during the winter season are sparse. The zoo
was nearly forced to close this time last year until it was rescued by a local
government loan of 2.05 million yuan.
Wu said the loan has run out and the zoo is lobbying
for more financial assistance from the government.
But a spokesman with the municipal government of
Shenyang told Xinhua that the government would not be offering any further loans
to the zoo.
"We will not give the zoo any more money as the
management can not repay it. But we will buy food for the animals so they no
longer suffer from starvation," he said.
He Zhen, director of the local investment promotion
bureau, told Xinhua he was looking for buyers for the zoo but, with the
investment prospects so bleak, it could be a long search.
Life is tough for animals in many of China's zoos and
tiger parks.
The Hengdaohezi Feline Breeding Center in northeast
China's Heilongjiang Province is the world's largest Siberian tiger breeding
base. The tiger population has grown from eight, when the park opened in 1986,
to around 700.
The park has started to exercise birth control on
tigers and feed them with less expensive chicken instead of beef. The center has
continually bemoaned its lack of funds and earlier this year called for the
legalization of the trade of tiger parts to boost its income.