SINGAPORE – Hardly the cantankerous, dust storm-kicking Looney Tunes beasts, four tasmanian devils from Australia, each about the size of a shiba inu dog, have now made their home at the Night Safari.
Making their debut in a new exhibit on Tuesday, these endangered animals will make Singapore their permanent home, acting as animal ambassadors for the plight of their counterparts in the wild.
The four animals are managed by Australia’s Save the Tasmanian Devil Programme (STDP).
It was introduced in response to an infectious cancer that led to significant decline of tasmanian devil numbers in the wild, said Mr David Schaap, senior wildlife officer from the Department of Natural Resources and Environment Tasmania.
Spread from one tasmanian devil to another through skin-to-skin and sexual contact, the devil facial tumour disease causes large facial tumours to grow around their mouths, making eating hard for the animals.
Most devils that catch the disease die of starvation.
With more than 80 per cent of the wild population of tasmanian devils succumbing since 1996, Mr Schaap said the STDP seeds these animals in zoos globally to build insurance colonies as a crucial response to the threat the species faces as a result of the disease.
Insurance colonies for threatened animals in captivity ensure they do not go extinct through conservation and breeding programmes.
The effort to bring the animals here from an insurance colony started in 2018, and much preparation was required before the zoo was ready to receive them, said Dr Luis Carlos Neves, vice-president of animal care at Mandai Wildlife Group.
Tasmanian devils have unique vocalisations such as growls, screams and screeches when feeding or during confrontations, and live in dark confined environments such as caves and burrows.
Dr Neves said the animal care team had to work closely with their counterparts in Australia to design a suitable habitat for the animals in Singapore and upskill the zoo’s animal care team to care for the endangered marsupials.
In 2019, the team travelled to Tasmania to undergo training and learn the biology of the animals, as well as how to safely manage, restrain them for medical procedures, and feed them properly.
During the pandemic in 2020, a video tour of the new exhibit here was filmed, so experts in Australia could verify that the facilities suited the animals’ needs.
After four years of preparation, Crumpet, Snickers, Jesse and Panini – as the four female marsupials are called – finally arrived in Singapore on Oct 7.
After the month-long mandatory quarantine, they now live in two expansive habitats with indoor dens and outdoor yards, which give them space to roam and explore, as well as a den that allows the nocturnal creatures to rest during the day.
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