Annual London Zoo 'stock take' set to finish

The yearly stocktake is a requirement of the zoo's annual licence.

The keepers have got lots of tricks up their sleeve to be able to count these animals.
Author: Aileen O'SullivanPublished 4th Jan 2024

Staff at London Zoo are set to finish the two day task of counting around 14,000 animals from giant tortoises and millipedes to penguins and tigers.

The yearly stocktake is a requirement of the zoo's annual licence, and sees zookeepers count hundreds of species over the course of two days.

The conservation zoo is home to more than 300 different species

These include Sumatran tigers, Asiatic lions, Galapagos giant tortoises, zebras, penguins and endangered Seychelles giant millipedes.

Dan Simmonds, zoological operations manager, told the PA news agency: "It's a really important day for us.

"Much as we know how many animals we've got here at the zoo, we like to formalise it once per year and it takes up to two days to count the animals.

"Across about 300 species, by the end of tomorrow we'll have counted somewhere in the region of 14,000 animals.

"The keepers have got lots of tricks up their sleeve to be able to count these animals."

A penguin gets in line to be counted

New additions to the zoo in 2023 included a female sloth and six Socorro dove chicks, a species which is extinct in the wild.

Once all creatures have been recorded, the information will also be shared with zoos around the world as part of the ongoing effort to manage worldwide conservation breeding programmes for endangered animals.

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