Showing posts with label point defiance zoo. Show all posts
Showing posts with label point defiance zoo. Show all posts

Saturday, November 26, 2011

Tapir Skull at Point Defiance Zoo

August 27, 2006 ~ Tacoma, Washington

There was a tapir skull on display outside the Asian tapir enclosure at Point Defiance Zoo on one of my trips up there in 2006. Tapir skulls are interesting and there was a nice young woman giving info to anyone who would listen, explaining points about the skull. Notice the huge area between the top of the jaw and that small triangle of bone above it. This is the space necessary for all the passages and muscles of the tapir's nose.

Click on any photo to enlarge.



The eye socket is not enclosed, but is wide open towards the back of the head. This is a primitive form not seen in many mammals.


Check out the inside of the nasal cavity. I'm not sure what those parallel ridges are for. And check out the guy in the corner. See what I mean about the eye sockets being different?


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Monday, February 14, 2011

How to Make Tapir Tracks

Point Defiance Zoo, Washington
August 26, 2006

In this display, the Point Defiance Zoo shows how they made the tapir tracks used as an educational feature in their pavement. See this post for the tracks.


I left this photo large so when you click on it, you should be able to read the text. Click once, then click again for the full-size image.


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Sunday, January 30, 2011

Tapir Tracks at Point Defiance Zoo

Tacoma, Washington ~ August 27, 2006

Some of the things you find on the pavement are just unique. It almost made my day when I looked down and found tapir tracks embedded in the concrete at Point Defiance (only "almost" because we still had the real tapirs to visit). Zoos are doing a lot more these days to enhance the educational and fun value of the grounds as well as creating interesting habitat for what's inside the enclosures.

Pictured above is a tapir's rear footprint. Since the zoo has Asian tapirs, I'm assuming they took a mold from their Asian tapirs to use when they poured the concrete - and anyway, the footprint of each species has its own conformation. An Asian tapir print might possibly be confused with a Baird's tapir, but probably not with the other two species. The hind foot of every tapir species has three toes, and each toe is encased in its own separate hoof. Interesting, yes? Tapirs have feet that are totally unique in the animal world.


Now it gets even more interesting. Here you see a hind foot (below) with the forefoot superimposed over it, obliterating part of the track. This is a typical footprint pattern of tapirs. Note that the front foot has the prints of four toes. All tapirs have four toes on each front foot, but sometimes the tracks imprint in such a way as to make it appear that there are five toes. The tapir is not the only animal that steps in its own tracks. Check out these prints of big cat footprints, too.

See tapir feet here and tapir footprints here. Thanks, Point Defiance Zoo, for making your pavement so interesting and educational!

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This blog is sponsored by Tapir and Friends Animal Store.
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Thursday, September 02, 2010

Watch Your Manners!

Last Sunday, the Tapir Preservation Fund took a field trip to the Point Defiance Zoo in Tacoma, Washington, to observe the resident pair of Malayan or Asian tapirs. It was so much fun to listen to the many visitors incorrectly identify our burly friends as large pigs. Then again in this picture the female, with her tongue hanging out, is "hamming it up" or just acting like a ... you know what!. Tapir and Friends Animal Store has a large variety of Asian tapir items, especially plastic tapirs, knitted tapirs, and stuffed tapirs. Of course tapirs are not remotely related to pigs, but are more closely associated with rhinos and horses.
Posted by Lee
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Friday, April 06, 2007

Jambi the Asian Tapir - Point Defiance Zoo

Photo by Will Mistretta
Point Defiance Zoo, Tacoma, Washington

Photo of Jambi, a Malayan tapir at the Point Defiance Zoo, Tacoma, Washington, courtesy of Will and Libby Mistretta, April 6, 2007. Jambi came to Tacoma from Washington, D.C.

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