

" a bit like a fire drill," she said. "Somebody will call out on the radio, 'Tigers out!' and everyone has to know their roles. Smith said Canadian zoos would have similar "dry-run drills" and escaped-animal protocols. Association of Zoos and Aquariums told local media that the Cincinnati Zoo handled the breach of the gorilla enclosure correctly. Spokesman Rob Vernon said the association's accreditation procedure requires members to conduct four safety drills per year and to have a response plan in place for dangerous animals. Ultimately, if a zoo has dangerous animals, it needs to have a lethal option on hand in order to guarantee the safety of the humans working and visiting there, Smith said. No legitimate zoo or animal operation would operate without safety procedures in place, she said. In some situations, veterinarians might also carry a weapon if the situation calls for it." "There are always security staff in place that would carry weapons, and they have to undergo weapons training.

The western lowland gorillas have been a popular exhibit at the Cincinnati Zoo for years, and the shooting of Harambe prompted an outpouring of sympathy for the beloved ape. "It's not like all staff carry weapons," said Dale A. Smith, a professor at the Ontario Veterinary College at the University of Guelph. While multiple zoos declined to give specific details of their plans for dealing with breaches of animal enclosures because of the "sensitivity of the situation" (as one Toronto Zoo employee put it), there are protocols in place to deal with events similar to the one that occurred at the Cincinnati Zoo. Glenn De Baeremaeker, a member of the Toronto Zoo board of directors, has already said the incident in Cincinnati would prompt additional checks of the zoo's enclosures. On the flip side, it has created a debate, and debates are good." Weapons training We have to look at what went wrong, understand, make sure it doesn't happen again. "I think we have to look at our procedures. "I think that event, that very sad event, really should be looked at as a teachable moment for accredited zoos," said Massimo Bergamini, executive director of Canada's Accredited Zoos and Aquariums. The incident also reignited a decades-old debate about zoos and whether their educational value outweighs the negative impacts on animal welfare.ĭuration 2:41 Officials killed gorilla after a 4-year-old fell into exhibit moat Tranquillizing Harambe was not an option, since most tranquillizers take several minutes to work and can induce violent behaviour.Ī video of the incident prompted indignation across the internet and set off a debate about whether it was really necessary to kill Harambe (there are conflicting interpretations of what is actually going on in the video). Gorilla shot dead after boy, 4, falls into enclosure.Police investigate parents of boy who got into gorilla pen.

The 17-year-old, 180-kilogram western lowland gorilla named Harambe was killed by a special response team after it was decided that the toddler's life was in danger, though there are conflicting accounts about what Harambe's true intentions may have been. The shooting death of a silverback gorilla at the Cincinnati Zoo earlier this week after a three-year-old boy fell into the ape's enclosure has raised questions about what protocols and tools Canadian zoos have at their disposal to handle a similar situation.
