Zoo Staff Finds Treats Help With The Vaccination Of Animals | WFAE 90.7 - Charlotte's NPR News Source


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Zoo Staff Finds Treats Help With The Vaccination Of Animals Published July 7, 2021 at 7:20 AM EDT Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Email Listen • 1:52


NOEL KING, HOST:


Three mountain lions, two tigers and two grizzly bears were the first zoo animals to be vaccinated for the coronavirus.


ALEX HERMAN: Oh, Archie the ferret - I forgot about him. He's on the list, too.


LEILA FADEL, HOST:


Dr. Alex Herman is vice president of veterinary services at the Oakland Zoo, where, during this pandemic, zero animals have had COVID. And it has been a lot of work keeping them safe.


HERMAN: All keepers - PPE, really strict protocols for hand-washing and food preparation.


KING: And so the zoo applied to get an experimental vaccine from Zoetis, and last week, a donation arrived. The veterinary drug company is giving doses to dozens of zoos with federal


authorization.


FADEL: Now, you might think a tiger would be a little vaccine hesitant, but Herman says it can be persuaded with treats.


HERMAN: Basically, our nurses train the tiger to lay against the chain-link fence, and then one animal care person will squirt goat's milk - I think, is the real treat for the tigers - in


their mouth while the other people give them an injection.


(SOUNDBITE OF ARCHIVED RECORDING)


UNIDENTIFIED ZOOKEEPER #1: Poke. Poke. Good job (laughter).


UNIDENTIFIED ZOOKEEPER #2: Good boy.


UNIDENTIFIED ZOOKEEPER #1: Nicely done, sir.


FADEL: The special treat for black bears and grizzly bears - whipped cream and ice cream, which usually works.


HERMAN: There was one group of bears that the whipped cream was too exciting, and they couldn't focus on their behavior, so they weren't allowed to have it.


KING: (Laughter) Dr. Alex Herman says it's important for their animals to get shots because many of them are at risk and endangered.


HERMAN: We have really big responsibility to be stewards of these beautiful animals, and certainly, the evidence shows that the benefit far outweighs the risk in this situation.


KING: Next up for vaccination at the Oakland Zoo are the primates, fruit bats and the pigs.


(SOUNDBITE OF FREDDIE JOACHIM'S "SUN DRESS") Transcript provided by NPR, Copyright NPR.