Feeding the Animals at the National Zoo
After hiring the first animal nutritionist 30 years ago, the National Zoo prepares specific, well-balanced meals for each animal
- By Joseph Caputo
- Smithsonian.com, April 08, 2009, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 2)
Nutritionists sometimes learn about the natural history of zoo residents from preparing their meals. “We understand what livestock eat, but for exotic animals, there are peculiarities that are not known yet,” says Michael Schlegel, a nutritionist with the San Diego Zoo. For instance, when giant elephant shrews first arrived at the Philadelphia Zoo in 2000, a diet of insects and cat food alone didn’t suffice for the long-nosed critters. The adults looked healthy, but their offspring had bone deformities characteristic of a Vitamin C deficiency. The deformities made nutritionist Barbara Toddes realize that the shrews needed a more diverse diet. The problem was solved when seeds, nuts and leaf litter were added.
It's not possible to replicate the diets that animals consume in the wild, just the nutritional equivalent. “If you have a reptile that’s a free-ranging insectivore, it has access to thousands of different choices,” Maslanka says. “It’s going to get a broader nutrient profile from that diet than the one we’re feeding him, so we have to get it right.”
Inside the National Zoo’s commissary, a radio plays in the background as two young employees cut up bananas, lettuce, apples, carrots and corn and mix them with multivitamin-like biscuits that will later be fed to the orangutans. The chefs read from cookbooks detailing the individualized meals required for each animal. As Maslanka watches over the preparations, he notes some of the unique tastes of the zoo’s residents. “Our new spectacled bear, Billy Jean, loves biscuits,” he says. When asked how the biscuits taste, he holds one of the grainy, chicken-nugget-sized lumps in his hand. It smells of citrus. “How about we go with cardboard,” Maslanka says with a laugh.
Wherever possible, food is delivered in a way that stimulates an animal’s innate foraging behaviors—giraffes reach for alfalfa strung from trees, gorillas hunt for fruit hidden throughout their exhibit, and groundhogs dig for their vegetables. This tactic has helped Nikki, the now handsome spectacled bear, stay in shape. Visitors giggle as he perks up from his resting spot the moment the side gate to his exhibit at the National Zoo creaks open. The zookeeper walks out onto the cliff above Nikki and tosses fruit and biscuits over the edge. The spectacled bear spends the next half-hour walking around the back of his space, tracking down food and munching. Nikki may be on a diet, but he still likes to eat.
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Comments (3)
Wonderful article. I suggested the profession of animal nutritionist to my daughter who would like to work with animals but doesn't want to help operate on them! She doesn't like to see them hurt. I suggested she contact Natl. Zoo or other well know zoo to see what schooling she would need. Thanks.
Posted by Lucy Wolf on May 15,2012 | 12:56 PM
My husband and I have 30- 60 ft bamboo stalks and would like to donate the live bamboo. We have over 600 stalks but as we are older we need someone to cut down. Do you have someone who could help cut so we can donate to a good cause?
Posted by debbie dokken on April 28,2012 | 09:43 AM
Im 10 and im interested in all kinds of animals and sea creatures and is there any camps i can join?
Posted by William OConnor on November 9,2011 | 10:54 PM
Nicely written! 'avoids the color orange'--that's so odd!
Posted by Kristina on April 9,2009 | 05:36 PM