Thursday, December 27, 2007

Siberian tiger beheaded at China Zoo

China has closed an understaffed zoo where a rare Siberian tiger was found beheaded and skinned last week and where seven tigers died in the last four years.

Forestry and police officials in Yichang city in Hubei province, where the zoo is located, issued a directive closing the zoo and ordering it take a range of measures to improve security and living conditions for the animals.

The order came after wildlife officials gave details of the seven deaths after the bodies of two stillborn Bengal tiger cubs were found over the weekend in a refrigerator at the Three Gorges Forest Wild Animal World in Yichang.

There was no indication of foul play in the deaths of the cubs, who were stillborn on Nov 28, but the forestry bureau said the zoo failed to follow regulations for disposing of animal bodies.

Tiger skins are sold on the black market in China, and tiger parts are used in traditional medicines. Siberian tigers, also known as Amur tigers, are among the world's 10 most endangered species. They live in northeast China and the Russian Far East. Only 400 are thought to live in the wild.

The 5-year-old, 40-hectare zoo has more than 100 species of animals, including 15 tigers, five bears, six African lions, two wolves, 60 monkeys and some birds. But it has only five employees who handle animal breeding, management and ticket sales.

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