8-year-old giraffe dies at Greater Vancouver Zoo - Action News
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British Columbia

8-year-old giraffe dies at Greater Vancouver Zoo

The zoo, based in Aldergrove, B.C., said it's waiting for the results of a necropsy.

Jenga is one of 4 young zoo giraffes to die at at facility since 2006

an aerial shot of a zoo shows a half dozen buildings and several fenced-off fields.
The Greater Vancouver Zoo is seen in Langley, B.C., on Thursday, August 18, 2022. (The Canadian Press/Darryl Dyck)

Staff at the Greater Vancouver Zooare mourning the death of eight-year-old giraffe Jenga, who was found dead in his barn on Wednesday.

The zoo said in a statement that the eight-year-old male was found "peacefully resting in his barn stall" moments after having a meal on Wednesdaybut did not provide further details.

The Giraffe Conservation Foundation said the animals can live up to about 25 years in the wild and potentially longer in captivity. This means Jenga lived about a third of hislife expectancy.

The death has spurred some advocates to question the ethics behind keeping exotic animals in zoos.

CBC News has contactedthe zoo, which islocated in Aldergrove, B.C.,but has yet to hear back.

Two giraffes stand together, their necks entwined.
An eight-year-old giraffe has died at the Greater Vancouver Zoo. Newborn Rothschild's giraffes Emily, born Aug. 11, 2024, and Berti, born June 24, 2024, stand together during a name-giving event at the Tierpark Zoo in Berlin, Germany, Thursday, Aug. 22, 2024. (The Canadian Press and Associated Press/Markus Schreiber)

"Jenga has left us far too soon," Menita Prasad,the director of animal care at the zoo, said in a statement.

She said Jenga was known for a"bold" and "curious" personality and eagerness to interact with staff and surroundings.

"His presence brought joy to our staff and visitors alike, and his loss is being deeply felt across our zoo community."

Prasad saidthe zoo is still awaiting the results of a necropsy while other giraffes at the zoo "continue to display normal, healthy behaviour."

The B.C. SPCAtold CBC News in a statement that it "will likely conduct an investigation into this sad loss," but would not comment before any investigation was complete.

Several young giraffes

The zoo has lost young giraffes in the past.

Two died in November 2011, one of whom was three years old, and another in November 2012 that was 12.In June 2006, a baby female giraffe born at the zoo died after eight days.

Other notabledeaths of large animals at the zooinclude a 4,100-kilogram elephant, Tina, who developed health problems in August 2003 while being housed at the zoo. She was transferred to the Elephant Sanctuary in Tennessee for better treatment but died in July 2004.

The same year, two hippopotamuses, Gertrude and Harvey, died at the Greater Vancouver Zoo at the age of 20 about half their life expectancy.

Accredited institution

Prasad said in the statement that the Greater Vancouver Zoo was recently inspected and received accreditation renewal from Canada's Accredited Zoos and Aquariums (CAZA), andwill continue its mission "to safeguard the future" of giraffes.

CAZA is a private charity that, according to itswebsite,representsthe country's leading zoos and aquariums. Accredited institutions mustbe "guided by the highest standards of safety and animal care, as well as by clear education strategies and goals," according to the website.

The zoo says Jenga was born in 2016 at the Africa Lion Safari in Ontario and brought to British Columbia in 2018.

"His loss is profound, but it strengthens our resolve to continue advocating for the protection of giraffes in the wild," the zoo said.

The animal belonged to a subspecies native to South Sudan, Ethiopia, Kenya, and Uganda that had only 1,671 leftin the wild as of 2018 because of habitat encroachment and poaching.

The Greater Vancouver Zoo lists two other giraffes at the facility: Jagar, a six-year-old male and Milo, a four-year-old male.

Advocatequestions zoos

Emily Pickett, campaign director with the Vancouver Human Society, told The Early Edition onFridaythat the death underscores long-term concerns the society has around the welfare of animals at the zoo.

"Giraffes are very sensitive animals that we know do not fare well in captivity," she said, adding thatJenga did not have a large herd and was enclosed in a small range at the zoo.

"[Jenga] lived with only a couple of other giraffes, in a pretty small and barren enclosure, with little to no opportunity to engage in many of hisnatural behaviours, and certainly in a very different climate than his wild counterparts," she said.

Pickett is calling on the zoo tostop keeping exotic animalsand instead operate like an animal sanctuary by rescuing, caringfor and releasingspecies native to B.C.

With files from The Canadian Press and The Early Edition