HONOLULU
(HawaiiNewsNow) - Just in time for Valentine's, Malosi,
a male tiger from the Honolulu Zoo will be flying to Tacoma, Washington for a
chance to mate.
Zoo handlers hope love will be in the air as Malosi
meets Jaya, the Point Defiance zoo's female tiger.
"The Honolulu
Zoo is proud of the important role it continues to play in the collection of
scientific data and successful breeding of Sumatran tigers to enhance
conservation efforts and help save this amazing animal," said Honolulu Zoo
Director Manuel Mollinedo.
"The Sumatran tiger is critically endangered and we are working
hard to protect and boost the population of this extraordinary species," said Point
Defiance zoo's general curator Karen Goodrowe Beck.
To ease
his transition and reduce potential stress, Malosi will be escorted to Tacoma
Tuesday by his lifelong Honolulu Zookeeper Kristen Scheidley and by Port
Defiance Zookeeper Paul Povey. A Brigham
Young University
student will join them to collect and record information about stress
indicators and ameliorating factors.
Malosi
was born at the Honolulu Zoo in September 2008, along with male cubs Keahi and
Tondi. Keahi transitioned well last year to his new home at the Sendai Yagiyama
Zoo in Japan, and Tondi is
expected to go to the Parc des Félins near Paris, France
later this year. Their parents, Berani and Chrissie, will remain in Honolulu.
Sumatran
tigers are critically endangered. In the wild, they are found only in the
forests of the Indonesian Island of Sumatra. Indonesia has 65 Sumatran tigers living in zoos,
and others live in zoos in Europe, North America and Australia.
Scientists
estimate that more than 100,000 tigers roamed the forests of central and
southern Asia at the dawn of the Twentieth Century, but that the population has
been reduced to approximately 6,000. Three tiger subspecies are already
extinct. Sumatran tigers are the smallest of the five remaining subspecies.
The name Malosi means strong and
powerful in Samoan.
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