Caring gibbon thwarting Taipei Zoo’s spring-cleaning plans

The Taipei Zoo has been hoping for months to do a deep clean of its white-handed gibbons habitat, but the generosity of one of the primates has unwittingly given the zoo a headache and forced it to delay the cleaning, originally planned for early May.

To get the job done, the zoo has to tried to lure the family of four gibbons away from the outdoor exhibition area by placing food in the inner enclosure, allowing zookeepers to safely sanitize the outdoor area uninterrupted.

The plan has backfired, however, because of the kindness of one of the three gibbon siblings that reside there, the zoo said in a lighthearted press release.

The father and the middle sibling of the family have had no qualms entering the indoor location containing their food, but the oldest and youngest siblings have kept their distance.

Unwilling to leave his brothers behind, the most carefree of the gibbon siblings has gathered food left in the indoor enclosure and brought it to his brothers rather than waiting for them to go inside, thereby thwarting the facility’s hygiene-maintenance plans.

The kindness of the gibbon has given zookeepers a major headache, and the zoo, having run out of ideas, has appealed to members of the public to come up with new ways to get the apes into the indoor enclosure.

The exhibit is designed as a natural ecosystem able to naturally deal with waste, including through the addition of other animals and organisms such as tortoises and insects, according to the zoo.

But the buildup of debris such as fallen leaves, mud, and excrement over time is too much for the small habitat to handle, and it requires a thorough cleaning once every two years, with the most recent one scheduled for the beginning of May.

Source: Focus Taiwan News Channel