Δευτέρα 12 Ιανουαρίου 2009

ΑΘΛΙΕΣ ΣΥΝΘΗΚΕΣ ΣΕ ΖΩΟΛΟΓΙΚΟΥΣ ΚΗΠΟΥΣ ΣΤΗ ΒΟΥΛΓΑΡΙΑ

8-1-2009 Βουλγαρία.

Σε Ζωολογικό κήπο της Σόφιας, 1300 ζώα, βρίσκονται εκτεθειμένα σε θερμοκρασίες υπό του μηδενός (-15 βαθμούς) λόγω της διακοπής του ρωσικού φυσικού αερίου στην Ευρώπη. Ελέφαντες, μαϊμούδες, ρινόκεροι, παπαγάλοι και ιπποπόταμοι ,χωρίς θέρμανση στα καταλύματα τους,

Η ENDCAP, ΜΚΟ για την προστασία των ζώων τόνισε την αναγκαιότητα για την εφαρμογή της ευρωπαϊκής νομοθεσίας στους ζωολογικούς κήπους της Ευρώπης.

Στις 12 Νοεμβρίου 2008, στις Βρυξέλλες, παρουσίασε στο ευρωκοινοβούλιο ντοκουμέντα για την άθλια διαβίωση αγρίων ζώων σε αιχμαλωσία στους ζωολογικούς κήπους της Βουλγαρίας, της Ισπανίας και της Ρουμανίας. Χωρίς επαρκή χώρο για να κινηθούν, σοβαρές ελλείψεις στη διατροφή τους και πλήρη έλλειψη άσκησης , τρελαίνονται και αναπτύσσουν ανώμαλη συμπεριφορά, όπως επαναληπτικές –στερεοτυπικές -κινήσεις, άσκοπο βηματισμό πέρα δώθε, πτηνά μαδούν τα φτερά τους, ενώ κάποια ζώα καταστρέφουν τη γούνα τους και αυτο-ακρωτηριάζονται.

Baby macaque Angee is cuddled by its mother Nadya in their enclosure in the Sofia city zoo January 9, 2009. About 1,300 animals in the zoo were left without gas to heat their enclosures on Thursday, the latest victims of the Russia-Ukraine supply row. The zoo rushed to switch to electric heaters to keep its elephants, monkeys, parrots, rhinos and hippos warm in the sub-zero temperatures. REUTERS/Stoyan Nenov (BULGARIA)

http://www.reuters.com/news/pictures/searchpopup?picId=7788962

Animals in Bulgaria zoo shiver without gas heating
Thu Jan 8, 2009


SOFIA (Reuters) - About 1,300 animals in a Bulgarian zoo were left without gas to heat their enclosures on Thursday, the latest victims of the Russia-Ukraine supply row.


The zoo in the capital Sofia rushed to switch to electric heaters to keep its elephants, monkeys, parrots, rhinos and hippos warm in the sub-zero temperatures.

"About a third of the animals are vulnerable to cold," said the zoo's director Ivan Ivanov said. "Only the Siberian tigers feel comfortable in these temperatures."
All Russian gas supplies to Europe were halted over a price dispute a day earlier.
Heating was sharply reduced in snow-covered Sofia and hundreds of thousands of people across the Balkans were left in the cold as the impact on the hardest-hit region grew.

Bulgaria and the western Balkans rely almost entirely on Russian gas supplies which are crucial in the winter because utilities use gas to heat homes, offices and factories.

(Reporting by Anna Mudeva)
© Thomson Reuters 2009 All rights reserved

http://www.reuters.com/article/GCA-Oil/idUSTRE5074JJ20090108


Vague rules mean animals suffer in EU zoos: NGOs
Wed Nov 12, 2008


By Marty Swant

BRUSSELS (Reuters) - Tens of thousands of animals throughout Europe are kept in cruel conditions because zoos fail to apply EU rules on standards of care and the laws themselves are unclear, an animal welfare coalition said on Wednesday.

Zoos often fall short of providing proper space, nutrition and mental stimulation for the animals, said ENDCAP, a pan-European coalition of non-government organizations seeking better care for animals in captivity.

ENDCAP and fellow NGO Born Free Foundation took their message this week to the European Parliament in Brussels, where the two groups showed footage of zoo animals in Romania, Spain and Bulgaria living in what they called poor conditions.
"They are not stimulated so they start developing kinds of abnormal behavior like pacing, rocking. Some animals pull their feathers or hair out. Some actually go into self-mutilation," ENDCAP coordinator Daniel Turner said.

Turner said EU countries failed to enforce the bloc's rules on animal care because the regulations were vague and it was not clear how they should be implemented. As a result, zoos failed to meet even basic requirements for animals.

Zoos say it is not easy to comply with the rules, which include creating enough space for animals to roam.

Belgium's Antwerp zoo, for example, has few enclosures. Along with cages, it has spaces surrounded by glass for some animals so that visitors and animals can look at each other.

The zoo, trying to improve standards, has invested over 80 million euros ($101 million) in the past decade. Its director Rudy Van Eysendeyk says the city is growing around the zoo, making expansion more difficult.

He said Antwerp zoo was close to full compliance with the EU rules and would continue improvements even when it exceeded the requirements, spending 10 million euros each year on further programs and improvements.

Van Eysendeyk said the need for such extensive funding probably make it harder for smaller zoos to make needed changes.

Calling zoos a "necessary evil," he noted that some played a role in serious animal research and ran programs to help disappearing species reproduce.

"Unfortunately, man is taking more and more of the habitat of the animals ... we have to make people conscious of what they are doing to nature. So we have to bring people to the animals to see what the animals are ..." he said.

(editing by Dale Hudson and Tim Pearce)

© Thomson Reuters 2009 All rights reserved

http://www.reuters.com/article/environmentNews/idUSTRE4AB6PO20081112

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