‘Bloodsicles’, baths keep Philippine zoo animals cool as heatwave hits

A Bengal tiger licks a bloodsicle to cool off inside an animal enclosure at the Manila Zoo on April 30, 2024, amidst a heat wave. A Philippine zoo is giving tigers frozen treats made of animal blood and preventing lions from mating during the hottest time of the day as a heat wave scorches the country. (Photo by Ted ALJIBE / AFP)

Agence France-Presse

A Philippine zoo is giving tigers frozen treats made of animal blood and preventing lions from mating during the hottest time of the day as a heat wave scorches the country.

Unusually hot weather has sent temperatures in the capital, Manila, to a record high in recent days and forced schools across the archipelago nation to suspend in-person classes.

As people flock to air-conditioned shopping malls and swimming pools for relief from the extreme heat, animals at Manila Zoo are also trying to cool off.

Preventing heat stroke, particularly among the big cats, was the “main priority,” zoo veterinarian Dave Vinas told AFP on Tuesday when the mercury hit 37 degrees Celsius in the city.

Water is splashed on the walls and ground of concrete enclosures throughout the day to help lower the temperature inside.

“Bloodsicles” made from frozen ground beef or chicken, animal blood, and vitamins are given to the big cats to lick.

Tigers and lions are also regularly sprayed with water and take dips in pools inside their pens.

Too hot to mate

Wendell, a five-year-old Bengal tiger weighing almost 400 kilograms (882 pounds), pants non-stop as he soaks for hours in a shallow pool.

“Like the tiny cats we have at home, they need to sleep at least 12-16 hours a day. But at this time, since it’s really hot, they are swimming to relieve the heat from the body,” Vinas said.

Gab, a lioness, looks bored as she sits on an elevated concrete platform after zoo keepers lock her male companion Diego in another pen to prevent them from mating at the hottest part of the day.

“We don’t want to expose them to the mating part in this heat,” Vinas said. “We don’t want to trigger any heat strokes.”

Water is also poured over the enclosures housing snakes and turtles to help regulate their body temperature.

While icicles and baths were normal during the hotter months of March, April, and May, Vinas said this year’s heat was the most intense he had experienced.

“Even if they get good ventilation, the temperature every year gets worse and worse,” he told AFP.

“We just find ways to make it better for the animals.”

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