Health/Vet Posts

by , Keeper
I'm extremely excited to be working at the Museum since October 2010. My favorite part of this job- besides working with the animals- is listening to all of the Keeper stories, I hear a new one each day. In my spare time I enjoy hiking, belly dancing, and vegan cooking.
I work Sunday through Thursday. I can be found mostly behind the scenes or training the Ring Tail Lemurs.

A bowl full of mashed chow and banana…

May 15th, 2012
 

…Helps the medicine go down!

Keeper Jill wrote a post “Time for your medicine” about all the tricks we use to get animals to take their medicine. She posted pictures of the Red Ruffed Lemurs taking some meds.

The Ring Tailed Lemurs aren’t so easy! But I found a very easy mix of mashed lemur chow and banana that seems to mask their dewormer enough for them to eat it.

 

Here's the mashed chow

Add mashed banana

Add the dewormer

Mix it all together

 Cross your fingers and hope they eat it all 

Cassandra (in front) and Satyrus eating their dewormer mix

Lycus eating his dewormer mix

 

 
 
 
 

Join the conversation:

  1. My dog had to take a liquid dewormer once. I mixed it with cooked mashed liver. It smelled awful but he loved it! I’ve learned a lot about how to enrich my dog’s life through the keeper blog!

    Posted by leslie

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by , Keeper
I'm extremely excited to be working at the Museum since October 2010. My favorite part of this job- besides working with the animals- is listening to all of the Keeper stories, I hear a new one each day. In my spare time I enjoy hiking, belly dancing, and vegan cooking.
I work Sunday through Thursday. I can be found mostly behind the scenes or training the Ring Tail Lemurs.

A work in progress

March 18th, 2012

If you have read any of my posts before- you know that I am a huge fan of lemurs. One of the biggest reason I have an animal crush on lemurs is because I train our Ring Tailed Lemurs here at the Museum.

"left hand" behavior

I’ve posted about training before, check it out here, but this time I want to talk about my progress. The most important behavior I am working on with the ring tails right now is ‘crate’. By crate I mean that they go into the crate- don’t come bouncing out and allow me to close the door- while remaining calm. The end goal will be to crate them for vet procedures, using one or two treats only, and move them- in the crate all the way to the main building, which of course requires a ride in one of our vehicles. This trained behavior will alleviate several unpleasant aspects of catching lemurs. First the stress on the lemurs themselves will be minimal. Once they are comfortable with me shutting the crate door and picking them up, the rest is quite easy. When our ring tails get stressed they poo and it’s not pleasant. Typically it involves poor Sherry getting a bit covered in yucky lemur stress poo thus having to change her clothes several times in one day. So… less stress for lemurs, less poo for Sherry, and a great sense of accomplishment for me.

"crate" behavior

We’re not quite there yet, but today all 3 ring tails went into their crates, I shut the doors without issues. They stayed in for 1 minute- no issues, I picked up their crates and moved them a bit, then they sat for an additional minute- no issues. When the 2 minutes were up, I opened the door and then lemurs walked- not ran- out to claim their big reward!!! and I had a huge smile on my face! I have been this successful before but then they had some regression on the behavior, so it’s taken some time for them to get comfortable again. I’m happy to have great progress once again.

"here" behavior

Join the conversation:

  1. Today all 3 Ring Tails went into their crates for 4 mins each. After 1 min- I picked up the crate and moved them to the other side of the stall. Click- Treats! After 2 mins- I picked up the crate and moved them out of the stall into the keeper space. Click-Treats! After 3 mins- I picked up the crate and moved them back to their original spot. Click-Treats! After 4 mins- I opened the door and they got a big reward! Great day!

    Posted by Kimberly
  2. That’s awesome! Good job to all four of you!

    Posted by Kristen
  3. That’s super exciting! Good for you!

    Posted by sarah
  4. Thanks Guys!

    Posted by Kimberly

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by , Keeper
I'm extremely excited to be working at the Museum since October 2010. My favorite part of this job- besides working with the animals- is listening to all of the Keeper stories, I hear a new one each day. In my spare time I enjoy hiking, belly dancing, and vegan cooking.
I work Sunday through Thursday. I can be found mostly behind the scenes or training the Ring Tail Lemurs.

Lemur Photos

February 26th, 2012

I wanted to share some Lemur photos.

If you remember back several months ago- we had two interns Casey and Jessica who did their enrichment project for the lemurs- it was a teepee tree. We still use it and here are some recent photos of the ring tails climbing on it.

Lycus climbing

Cassandra and Satyrus climbing on their enrichment

 

As for the red ruffed lemurs, we were treating Iris twice a day with medicine that we put in mashed banana, which often meant her sister and mother also got mashed banana as a treat.  Here are photos of Jethys (Iris’ sister) who was so “excited” about her banana- she took the bowl right out of my hand and held it herself- hahaha

Jethys holding her own bowl with both hands

One hand!

When she was finished she dropped it on the ground

 

Hope you enjoyed- here’s Lycus to say GOODBYE

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by , Keeper
Hiya! I'm Mikey. That's all you get. :)
I work Tuesday through Saturday and you can usually find me training the bears, mucking with the reptiles and saying bad words in Italian to the aquatic filter systems.

For shame…!

February 14th, 2012

So my friend Katy is another keeper here who specializes in the Veterinary aspects of our collection.  She does the majority of her work through our vet room and making sure everyone stays healthy (animal wise, at least).  But sometimes when we are a little short handed, she jumps right in and lends a hand to help clean exhibits or anything else that needs to be done.  Unfortunately, in the excitement of cleaning an exhibit and scrubbing poo off of things she sometimes can get a little distracted and make a slight error…

Uhhh...Katy?

I mean, really!  Who throws away a perfectly good opossum?!  :)   On the other hand, Einstein (that would be the opossum in the trash) is probably pretty disappointed that it’s not a real trash bin with lots of yummy leftovers to pick through.

Nope. He doesn't look guilty at all!

We may have to watch out… if Max comes up missing, I know who my money is on!  :)

 

Disclaimer: Please don’t hurt me Katy, I’m just kidding!  :)

Join the conversation:

  1. Hello, The is a great write up the above is cool can someone reply to tell me how to sing up for your newsletter

    Posted by Vivien Teet

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by , Keeper
I'm extremely excited to be working at the Museum since October 2010. My favorite part of this job- besides working with the animals- is listening to all of the Keeper stories, I hear a new one each day. In my spare time I enjoy hiking, belly dancing, and vegan cooking.
I work Sunday through Thursday. I can be found mostly behind the scenes or training the Ring Tail Lemurs.

“Target” click

February 12th, 2012

One of my favorite duties as an Animal Keeper is training with the Ring Tailed Lemurs. We train many of the animals at the museum using operant conditioning. When I first started here, I was familiar with training, I used positive reinforcement for several animals at my previous job- a Serval, African Crested Porcupine, Binturong, several birds including large Macaws, a Raven, Crow, Hawks and Owls.

Serval

Binturong

African Crested Porcupine

Even Rats- But it wasn’t until working here at the Museum that I really got into Operant Conditioning. We use training for 3 reasons- husbandry, enrichment, and bonding.

Husbandry – anything having to do with taking care of that animal. Shifting between areas, vet care, travel (crate or trailer) etc

Enrichment- let’s face it these animals live in the same place all the time, training allows them to move, think, react, predict, interact with other animals. They are using tons of physical and mental energy during training sessions.

Bonding- if an animal is sick, injured, or, in the rare case, has escaped- their trainer would be the first to respond and hopefully have a strong enough bond with that animal so that help can be provided.

 

Can you see Jill's hand signal and clicker?

Each Keeper here trains a group of animals

Katy- Bears (4)

Mikey- Bears (4)

Marilyn- Red Ruffed Lemurs (3)

Kimberly- Ring Tailed Lemurs (3)

Jill- Pigs (2)

Sarah- Donkey and little goats (3)

Kent- Steer and big goat (2)

Mikey training Gus bear for our training consultant Julie Grimes

 

And each animal has been trained to do different behaviors. The Ring Tailed Lemurs for example have learned the following- scale, up, down, left hand, right hand, touch, jump, follow, off, here, come, target, crate. Chummix may know the behavior “come” but Kent may have a completely different hand signal for it than I do for the ring tails.

Cassandra during a training session

Below are a couple older blog posts about training-

Marilyn’s post about training Chummix- here

Kristen’s post with video of Cassidy training- here

Larry’s post shows Yona’s first session with Katy- here

 

Join the conversation:

  1. Keeper Comment :

    Welcome, we hope you enjoy!

    Posted by Kimberly Lawson

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by , Keeper
I have been working at the museum since 2003, and I feel fortunate to have a job where I can start my day with amazing animals surrounding me. I enjoy camping, hiking and rock climbing in my spare time when the weather is nice.
I work Tuesday through Saturday and spend a lot of time behind the scenes, but you might find me at a public program or feeding the farmyard animals in the afternoon.

Trash anyone?

February 10th, 2012

From left to right: wolf exhibit, bear exhibit, farmyard exhibits, lemur exhibit.

Anyone who has been in the animal keeping profession knows that part of the job includes the unfortunate task of pulling trash out of the animal exhibits. On some level it is expected that a random object will occasionally be found in an animal’s enclosure, due to a visitor accidentally dropping something and not being able to recover it (please don’t try to retrieve the item yourself!). However, we have noticed the amount of trash in the exhibits increase significantly over the last couple of years.

By far, we find the most trash in the farmyard exhibits.

Keeper Katy focuses in the vet area of the animal department, so she is notified whenever anything is found in an exhibit so that we can put a “watch” on the animal for behavioral changes in case it ingested part of the item/food/trash. Since the keepers started finding items more frequently, Katy decided to start saving all the trash to see just how much was collected over the course of 2011.

The amount of trash in these pictures might astonish you, but what’s even more astonishing is that Katy didn’t start saving the items until the Spring of 2011.  So there’s a good four months worth of trash not included in these pictures. On top of that, there were times that the keepers forgot to keep the items for Katy, so those weren’t added to the bags either. I know there were at least three occasions where I forgot to save the trash for Katy, and I threw it away after pulling it from the enclosure.

The contents in this picture are a prime example of why we don't allow balloons on grounds. The outcome could have been very bad if one of our bears had ingested the helium balloon you see in the bag on the right.

There are times when a visitor accidentally drops something in an exhibit and they find a museum staff member to let them know. This is the best thing to do because the staff member will radio the keepers, and it allows us to remove the article from the exhibit as soon as possible.

Above: Here’s a closer look at some of the items we found in the farmyard. The mangled Mountain Dew can you see to the right came from the donkey and goat yard, and clearly it had been chewed on and ripped up by one or all of them. Worrisome for the keepers!

Here’s my personal favorite, and it was found in Lightning the donkey’s stall one morning. Unfortunately it was mixed in with some of his hay and could have been ingested fairly easily. It’s a hair attachment with feathers, and Kent saved this one and has it hanging up above his desk.

It’s nice to see that when our visitors are eating chips and drinking soda, they are trying to be healthy about it. However, these items are not healthy for our animals, even if they are “baked” or “diet”!

Katy has already started collecting exhibit trash for 2012, so watch for the blog post in early 2013 to see what we collected over the course of this year.

 

Join the conversation:

  1. It’s not just things being dropped in that are worrisome. Some of our animals will steal things from guests right off the railings or even from their hands! I rescued many applesauce coated toddler spoons from the donkey and goats last summer and the pigs have stolen plastic snack baggies right through the fencing. I like to ask guests to stand an arms’ length away from the fences if they have food or drinks, just to be safe.

    Posted by Sarah

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by , Keeper
I have been working at the museum since 2003, and I feel fortunate to have a job where I can start my day with amazing animals surrounding me. I enjoy camping, hiking and rock climbing in my spare time when the weather is nice.
I work Tuesday through Saturday and spend a lot of time behind the scenes, but you might find me at a public program or feeding the farmyard animals in the afternoon.

What a prize!

January 4th, 2012

If you visit the museum often, you will soon notice the “new” yellow horse trailer sitting at the entrance of the farmyard. The trailer is not new literally, but it is new to us!  And it was actually given to us as a donation after keeper Sarah did lots of searching on line and in the papers.

We have never had a trailer of this size, but now that we do it will open up a world of opportunities for us to transport our large hoofstock to veterinary facilities or for other animal transfers. The trailer needed a few repairs, and a new paint job, before it could be moved to the farmyard. But now that we have it back from being painted, the farmyard animals will soon start being trained to walk into the trailer and, eventually, travel in it.

The trailer is sitting across from the donkey and goat yard, so they already have the chance to look at it daily and get accustomed to it. According to Sherry, she’s never seen Lightning’s ears move in so many different directions as what they did when he was watching this trailer being moved in!

The fence to the donkey and goat yard is in the background.

 

 

Join the conversation:

  1. Good day, This Health/Vet Animal Department article is swell, totally appreciate your articles

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by , Director
I've been at the Museum sooooo long - almost as long as Erin's been alive. I do a little bit of everything as part of my job: care for the animals, work with the keepers and other staff, spend time with guests. Lucky me!
I spend a lot of time behind-the-scenes, or here after hours, but if you really want to see me, I am often in the bear yard scooping poop Thursday mornings.

Salamander Surgery: a new year with a little less

December 31st, 2011

One of our tiger salamanders will be a little smaller in 2012. A couple of weeks ago one of our tiger salamanders had surgery. For MANY months now we have been trying to treat and cure a growth on the salamander’s tail (Dr. Vanderford described the growth as a Chronic granulomatous inflammation). We have not been succesful, so it was finally time to amputate. Amputation sounds drastic and scary. All went well and the salamander is recovering just as hoped and expected.

 

 

We’ve written blog  posts about surgeries we’ve done on other animals. Take a look if you want:

red wolf

ferret

degu

Yona bear

Chummix Goat

 

 

Join the conversation:

  1. Will the salamander’s tail regrow like a lizard’s tail does? (Think I have heard that about lizard tails??)

    Posted by DJ
  2. Director Comment :

    Good question: no re-growing of the tail DJ.

    Posted by Sherry Samuels

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by , Keeper
I'm extremely excited to be working at the Museum since October 2010. My favorite part of this job- besides working with the animals- is listening to all of the Keeper stories, I hear a new one each day. In my spare time I enjoy hiking, belly dancing, and vegan cooking.
I work Sunday through Thursday. I can be found mostly behind the scenes or training the Ring Tail Lemurs.

Bath time

December 14th, 2011

Our copperhead soaking

Why do snakes soak themselves in water?

Because they don’t have a shower

Seriously though, snakes often soak in water before a shed. They may also soak because of mites, to warm themselves up, and just because.

snake shed

 

Want to read more from us about snakes?

Check out these posts: copperheads, venomous 1 and 2

 

 

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by , Keeper
I have worked in the animal department for about 5 years. Some of my favorites include ferrets and birds. I am also known for my weird obsession with things relevant to the 80's.
I work Tuesday-Saturday and can be seen training our pigs on occasion.

Lightnings teeth get a visit

November 17th, 2011

Did you know that there are equine dentists?! That is correct, there are dentists out there that specialize in equine. Although the field back then was not as advanced as today with technology and equipment, the upkeep of a horse was very important just like a oil change is to  a car.  Remember, people depended on their animals for transportation and labor and the better the care the longer the animals lasted and the better their general health.

Recently, Lightning had a visit from Dr. Cannedy who is his general vet and Dr. Gerard who specializes in Equine Surgery.His teeth were given a good examination.

First Lightning is given a sedative

Yup,nice and sedated

 

A special halter  is put on Lightning with a mouth speculum  so the vet is able to work in his mouth without the donkey being able to close it.

Lightning got his teeth “floated” which means they smooth his teeth with a file so they are nice and even. If equine are not examined and proper care of their teeth are not taken, it can lead to problems with eating and comfort because the teeth can become jagged and develop sharp edges. This floating does not hurt because the nerve is near the gum line.

The tool that is used on Lightning is electric powered and has a file like bit at the end of it that grinds the tooth down.

 

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