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Coronavirus pandemic
Image copyrightAFPImage captionThe panda twins in Berlin Zoo would draw big
crowds in normal times
Zoos that should have been crowded in the sunny Easter holidays are now
hard-up and asking for donations, as the coronavirus lockdown bites.
A zoo director in northern Germany has even admitted that some animals might
soon have to be fed to others, if the zoo is to survive.
"We've listed the animals we'll have to slaughter first," Neumünster Zoo's Verena
Kaspari told Die Welt.
Berlin Zoo has infant panda twins, but their fans can only watch them online.
The zoo's spokeswoman Philine Hachmeister told DPA news agency "the panda twins
are adorably sweet".
"Constantly we're thinking 'the visitors should be watching them live'. We don't want
the little pandas to be grown up by the time we finally reopen."
Big appetites
Ms Kaspari at Neumünster Zoo said killing some animals so that others could live
would be a last resort, and "unpleasant", but even that would not solve the financial
problem.
The seals and penguins needed big quantities of fresh fish daily, she pointed out.
"If it comes to it, I'll have to euthanise animals, rather than let them starve," she
said.
"At the worst, we would have to feed some of the animals to others."
She estimates the zoo's loss of income this spring will be about €175,000
(£152,400).
Germany's national zoo association (VdZ) argues that zoos, unlike many other
businesses, cannot go into hibernation and run down costs. Animals still have to be
fed daily and looked after, while a tropical enclosure has to be heated above 20C.
'It is a worrying time to be running a zoo'
Does the world need any more large zoos?
VdZ chief Jörg Junhold said the lockdown was costing a typical German zoo about
€500,000 weekly in lost turnover.
Schönbrunn Zoo, one of Vienna's top attractions, says it can manage for the time-
being by drawing on existing savings.
But on 1 April it sent 70% of its 230 staff on three months' furlough - sent home with
their jobs safeguarded. Austria has a "Kurzarbeit" (subsidised short-time work)
system like Germany's, so that most workers do not lose their jobs when their
employer hits hard times.
Ms Hachmeister at Berlin Zoo said "the apes especially love to watch people".
She said seals and parrots were also fascinated by their visitors, and "for them now
it's really pretty boring".
Last week Moscow Zoo also said its two giant pandas were "missing something now".
"They've started to much more actively approach every single person who walks
past their enclosure," it said.
Related Topics
Animals
Berlin
Coronavirus pandemic
15 April 2020
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