Two weeks after the Taipei Zoo began an experiment with a mixed-species enclosure, Diago the gorilla is living with a pair of Formosan Reeve’s muntjacs introduced to his enclosure without incident, which bodes well for the project’s success, the zoo said.
Earlier this year, Diago’s pack mate, Pao Pao (寶寶), was sent to the Apenhuel Primate Park in the Netherlands, where he is expected to become a pack leader and breed with the females, the zoo said.
Concerned that loneliness and boredom might depress Diago, the zoo said it consulted with primate experts and made his enclosure a better facsimile of the wilderness by introducing other animals.
Photo provided by Taipei Zoo
The muntjacs — a female and its female offspring — were chosen because they were least likely to cause trouble in the enclosure, the zoo said, adding that experts took great care to anticipate possible difficulties.
The night before the muntjacs were placed in the enclosure, the zoo’s head of its African animal division had a nightmare in which Diago became the size of King Kong and tore the muntjacs to pieces, the zoo said.
The fears were unfounded, as gorillas are herbivores and generally peaceful unless provoked by a threat to themselves or their pack, it said, adding that the muntjacs could run from Diago or hide in the unlikely event that he attacks them.
Photo provided by Taipei Zoo
On Oct. 22, the muntjacs were put in the enclosure by themselves before zoo workers reintroduced Diago on Nov. 7, it said.
The gorilla intimidated the muntjacs by beating his chest, and they ran away and hid, the zoo said, but added that after two weeks around Diago, the muntjacs had learned to avoid him by minimizing their daytime activity and staying in a corner.
Diago seems to understand that the muntjacs do not pose a threat to his territory or status and he no longer intimidates them, the zoo said, adding that both species would benefit from their peaceful coexistence.
SHIPS, TRAINS AND AUTOMOBILES: The ministry has announced changes to varied transportation industries taking effect soon, with a number of effects for passengers Beginning next month, the post office is canceling signature upon delivery and written inquiry services for international registered small packets in accordance with the new policy of the Universal Postal Union, the Ministry of Transportation and Communications said yesterday. The new policy does not apply to packets that are to be delivered to China, the ministry said. Senders of international registered small packets would receive a NT$10 rebate on postage if the packets are sent from Jan. 1 to March 31, it added. The ministry said that three other policies are also scheduled to take effect next month. International cruise ship operators
NUMBERS IMBALANCE: More than 4 million Taiwanese have visited China this year, while only about half a million Chinese have visited here Beijing has yet to respond to Taiwan’s requests for negotiation over matters related to the recovery of cross-strait tourism, the Tourism Administration said yesterday. Taiwan’s tourism authority issued the statement after Chinese-language daily the China Times reported yesterday that the government’s policy of banning group tours to China does not stop Taiwanese from visiting the country. As of October, more than 4.2 million had traveled to China this year, exceeding last year. Beijing estimated the number of Taiwanese tourists in China could reach 4.5 million this year. By contrast, only 500,000 Chinese tourists are expected in Taiwan, the report said. The report
Temperatures are forecast to drop steadily as a continental cold air mass moves across Taiwan, with some areas also likely to see heavy rainfall, the Central Weather Administration (CWA) said. From today through early tomorrow, a cold air mass would keep temperatures low across central and northern Taiwan, and the eastern half of Taiwan proper, with isolated brief showers forecast along Keelung’s north coast, Taipei and New Taipei City’s mountainous areas and eastern Taiwan, it said. Lows of 11°C to 15°C are forecast in central and northern Taiwan, Yilan County, and the outlying Kinmen and Lienchiang (Matsu) counties, and 14°C to 17°C
STEERING FAILURE: The first boat of its class is experiencing teething issues as it readies for acceptance by the navy, according to a recent story about rudder failure The Hai Kun (海鯤), the nation’s first locally built submarine, allegedly suffered a total failure of stern hydraulic systems during the second round of sea acceptance trials on June 26, and sailors were forced to manually operate the X-rudder to turn the submarine and return to port, news Web site Mirror Daily reported yesterday. The report said that tugboats following the Hai Kun assisted the submarine in avoiding collisions with other ships due to the X-rudder malfunctioning. At the time of the report, the submarine had completed its trials and was scheduled to begin diving and surfacing tests in shallow areas. The X-rudder,