Weather Afternoon: 10°c Sunny spells Tonight: 4°c Partly Cloudy Night

News

Lumpur of London Zoo with Raika, the first tigress to reject him
Loveless triangle: Lumpur of London Zoo with Raika, the first tigress to reject him

The lonely tiger of London Zoo and a £5m problem

Robert Mendick, Chief Reporter
1 Oct 2008


Romance does not come cheap at London Zoo. At a cost of £5 million, the zoo's tigers are to get a new home in the hope it might finally encourage them to breed.

A public appeal is being launched to raise the funds to replace the current tiger paddock. It is too small, outdated and apparently not conducive to amorous behaviour.

The need for a more romantic lair became apparent when Sumatran tigress Sarah - brought in specially from Dudley Zoo last summer - failed to spark with the zoo's resident 11-year-old male Lumpur. Rather than hitting it off, Lumpur hit out and scratched Sarah, causing a small wound to one of her hind legs.

Now the zoo in Regent's Park wants to build a new paddock that will allow the tigers a break from each other.

Last year, it opened a £5.3 million Gorilla Kingdom exhibit and it proposes to do the same for the rare tigers and the lions in the enclosure next door. "It is quite an outdated facility and we want to create for lions and tigers what we have for gorillas," said David Field, director of the Zoological Society of London, which runs London Zoo.

"One of the things the tigers want is privacy. Sometimes they want to be together and sometimes they want to be apart. Having a multi-paddock system allows the tigers to be apart at some times and together at others."

Westminster Council licensing inspectors concluded that the enclosure, first opened in 1976, was too cramped and that a new home should be in place within two years. "The tiger paddock needs to be enlarged and provide separation for the tigers," the inspectors wrote.

With just 400 Sumatran tigers in the wild, the zoo had hoped to play a role in preventing the species becoming extinct. In June last year, 14-year-old Sarah arrived from Dudley Zoo, where she had successfully bred, in the hope she could repeat the trick with Lumpur. In exchange, tigress Raika went to Dudley, having failed to breed with Lumpur despite the zoo's best efforts.

Barnardo Luque, a City of London vet, who formed part of the Westminster Council inspection team, noticed the scratch on Sarah's leg. He said: "The tigress did appear to have some injuries. It was a situation that you might expect to see in large felines but if you see an injury you have to do something." Sarah will now return to Dudley while Raika, eight, will come home in the next few weeks. In the meantime, Sarah is on her own in an enclosure next to the Asian lions Abby and Lucifer.

Reader views (0)

 Add your view

No comments have so far been submitted.


Add your comment

 

Terms and conditions Make text area bigger You have  characters left.

We welcome your opinions. This is a public forum. Libellous and abusive comments are not allowed. Please read our House Rules.

For information about privacy and cookies please read our Privacy Policy.


 

 

  • Riot axeman terror at McDonald's Axe man A rioter who terrorised diners with an axe at McDonald's has been jailed for five years and three months - one of the toughest sentences for...
  • Terror of boy exposed as gang witness Scotland Yard A BOY and his family had to flee their London home after a blunder by the Met and Crown Prosecution Service gave his name to gang members he...
  • Mayor of poverty-hit council hires adviser in £1,000-a-day deal Lutfur Rahman One of the poorest boroughs in London is under fire for spending £1,000 a day on a personal aide for its mayor
  • Make 'death trap' junctions safer for cyclists, demands university mourning three Ellie Carey A university that saw two students and a member of staff killed cycling in London last year has accused Boris Johnson of failing to act...
  • Soho 'field hospital' for drunks reopens David Cameron smile A field hospital set up to deal with London's drunks is being extended as the binge-drinking crisis deepens in the capital
  • Jobless total jumps by 48,000 with UK facing 'zig-zag year' Job Centre unemployment Bank of England Governor Sir Mervyn King warned Britain faces a "zig-zag" year of growth and gloom today as unemployment rose by 48,000
  • Greens and Ukip could test Paddick in fight for mayor poll third place Paddick Brian Paddick could struggle even to finish third in this year's mayoral election, as smaller parties look set to capitalise on Lib-Dem woes...
  • Phone-hack private eye can appeal over human rights ruling Glenn Mulcaire The private investigator at the centre of the phone hacking scandal was today granted the right by the Supreme Court to appeal against a...
  • Google TV challenges Apple and Sky Google TV Google and Sony have joined forces in a bid to bring the internet to millions of televisions.
  • We're the Cockney rhyming gang: Poetry coaching given to Tower Hamlets pupils Bonner Primary School Hundreds of schoolchildren who had never been inside a theatre have been coached to write and perform their own poetry on stage
  •  

    Don't Miss
    • London Gateway

      Supersize superport: London Gateway

      London Gateway, the £1.5bn container port under construction on the Thames at Thurrock, will have capacity to unload six of the world's largest ships at one time and have as much impact on the capital as a new airport or half a dozen Westfield shopping centres
    • Matthew Williamson

      One stylish affair: Matthew Williamson

      With London Fashion Week kicking off on Friday, British designer Matthew Williamson tells Rosamund Urwin about breaking up with his ex, post-show partying and his new model man