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Headline: Time To Take Stock! London Zoo Conducts Annual Count Of Animals

Caption: **VIDEO AVAILABLE. CONTACT INFO@COVERMG.COM TO RECEIVE.** One, zoo, three, four… London Zoo has today (Wednesday 3 January) carried out its annual stocktake, a mammoth task which involves tallying up every furred, feathered and scaled creature in its care. The conservation zoo is home to more than 300 different species, from Endangered Galapagos giant tortoises and Asiatic lions to Critically Endangered Sumatran tigers - all of which are logged and recorded as part of the Zoo’s annual license requirement. During the count, Crispin and Zac, the Zoo’s two boisterous Sumatran tiger cubs quickly turned the ‘register’ in their enclosure into a toy, dragging it away to gnaw on, while the colony of 74 Humboldt penguins patiently lined up to be counted by zookeeper Jessica Fryer. Chapman’s zebras, Kabibi, Kianga and Spot were added to the tally by zookeeper Becca Keefe, and Kim Carter ticked off Galapagos Giant tortoises Priscilla, Polly and Dolly. Sam Aberdeen made sure the zoo’s population of endangered Seychelles giant millipedes were all accounted for, a species under threat in the wild due to climate change and the introduction of invasive species. Part of ZSL, a science-driven conservation charity, London Zoo is working to protect and restore wildlife in the UK and around the world. Providing a home to species which are extinct in the wild, including tropical tree snails and rare doves, London Zoo contributes to the conservation of these and hundreds of other threatened species through veterinary research, its world-leading animal care expertise and conservation breeding programmes. 2023 saw Marilyn the two-toed sloth give birth to a young female in the humid Rainforest Life habitat, while an impressive 17 chicks hatched in the Zoo’s tropical birdhouse in August, including six Socorro dove chicks, which represent a huge boost to the numbers of this Extinct in the Wild species.

Keywords: feature,photo feature,photo story

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