The facility in Leipzig says it had to shoot the animals for population control reasons.
The Leipzig Zoo has shot four of its lechwe antelopes, citing population control reasons, with no mention of health issues or old age. The carcasses were fed to other animals at the zoo.
The antelopes were put down on Friday morning with five “precision shots,” as confirmed by the zoo’s spokesperson. According to the facility, it had unsuccessfully tried to transfer the animals to another zoo via the Ex-situ Program – a population management and conservation scheme run by the European Association of Zoos and Aquaria.
The Leipziger Volkszeitung reported, citing the zoo’s administration, that the decision was approved by a special ethics commission.
A similar case occurred in Australia’s Adelaide Zoo in October, where two lions were euthanized. A male named Mujambi was the first to go after suffering health issues, which the veterinary team was unable to treat. Soon thereafter, the zoo decided to put down Mujambi’s long-time partner, Amani, even though the lioness was not critically ill.
The facility explained that they chose to spare her the “negative impacts” of living alone. “Euthanasia was deemed to be in the best welfare outcome interests of Amani because of her strong bond with Mujambi,” it stated.
The zoo argued that “at 23 and 19, both lions were in the latter stages of their lives,” with director Phil Ainsley insisting that moving Amani and integrating her into another pride or environment “was considered too risky and stress provoking.”
The president and director of the Zoological Wildlife Foundation, Mario Tabraue, told 7NEWS that “there’s no logical reasoning or excuse for what was done here.” He suggested that the zoo could have at least tried to “find [the lioness] another mate or friend.”
In late 2022, staff at Sweden’s Furuvik Zoo shot and killed three chimpanzees, with one other left injured, after the animals escaped from their enclosure. The facility said at the time that the “fast, very strong and generally fearless” animals could “pose a threat to people’s lives.” A spokesperson added that the zoo did not have enough tranquilizers to handle the situation more humanely.