11 more dead tigers discovered in northeastern Chinese zoo

dead_tiger.jpg
Photo from Xinhua
We've mentioned that it's been a bad year for tigers thus far, ironic since it is The Year of The Tiger, but it seems like every other week just piles on more sad tiger preservation news. At least 11 Siberian tigers were found starved to death in a zoo in Shenyang, northeastern China.

According to the Times, the owners of the zoo ran out of money and fed the predators just one or two chicken carcasses a day over the past few weeks:

Six of the tigers died recently on a single day at the privately owned Iceberg Animal Zoo in Shenyang, the Liaoshen Evening News reported.

The animals had been confined in small, wet cages, it said...

A zoo official said: “The zoo is in a financial crisis and we haven’t been able to provide the tigers with sufficient food for the last two years. An adult tiger eats about 20lb of meat a day, but the tigers here can barely get a chicken to quench their hunger every one or two days.”

The zoo first claimed that the eleven tigers, who had died over the past three months, were victims of China Daily:

"Many privately-owned zoos were under financial pressure, and most of them fail to feed the animals well," said Liu...

As for regulating the privately-owned zoos, there were legal loopholes which made enforcement of the regulations impossible, said Liu.

"Wild Animal Protection Law" does not provide for any punishment for irresponsible zoo owners who abuse the animals.

In addition, "Property Law" stipulates that zoo owners have the right to keep animals and animal protection authorities have no right to interfere, said Liu.

Which means that until someone or something addresses these abuses, we're probably going to hear even more about tiger deaths as the year drags on. After all, Shenyang Forest Wild Animal Zoo still has a good 20 Siberians left. It's funny - earlier, we discussed the threat against wild tigers, who knew that the captured ones were in just as much trouble?

Contact the author of this article or email tips@shanghaiist.com with further questions, comments or tips.

Comments [rss]

  • chinalewis

    Harvest the zoo keepers organs and feed to animals

  • Pirx

    Did they ask for help? No. Why not? They won't be held accountable anyway, so why bother?



    As usual in China, it is always somebody elses fault. And if it is not, you get some long and meaningless explanation. Utterly predictable and boring.



    A 'real-existing socialism' classic, a national shame.

  • Bike Rider

    in the year of the tiger, this is not harmonious

  • SM

    Lets just hope they got a chance to harvest all the organs. The obvious solution is to sell the organs to people interested in their medicinal properties and then use the funds raised to buy food for the remaining tigers.

  • SM

    Tiger penis can fetch up to 40,000 rmb a piece. Assuming half of the 11 tigers were male that would be around 220,000 rmb. Tiger vagina, while being less popular and fetching quite a smaller price in restaurants, is quite tasty, or so I have been told. This seems almost like a win win situation for everyone other then the dead tigers themselves.

blog comments powered by Disqus

Personals

Enter our FREE personals site!

Tips

The day's most popular stories from Shanghaiist every evening in your inbox from our newsletter.

About Shanghaiist

Shanghaiist is a website about Shanghai, China.

Editor-in-Chief: Kenneth Tan
Senior Editor: Elaine Chow
Arts & Events Editor: Tiffany Ap
News Editor: Jessica Colwell
Founding Editor: Dan Washburn
Publisher: Gothamist

About | Advertising | Archives | Arts/Entertainment | Calendar | Contact | Contribute | Facebook | Favorites | Feedburner | Food/Drink | Jobs | Mobile | News | Other | Personals | Popular | RSS | Staff | Top Users | Twitter | Write For Us


Recent Comments

Contribute

Latest Tip:

Ovid: "It's useful that there should be Gods, so let's believe there are."
[more]

Latest Photo:

Subscribe

Use an RSS reader to stay up to date with the latest news and posts from Shanghaiist.

All Our RSS