Advertisement

S.F. zoo's big cats get stronger enclosure

A sign announces the closure of the large cat exhibits at the San Francisco Zoo in San Francisco on January 3, 2008. The facility reopened to the public today following the Christmas day escape of a Tiger which killed one patron. (UPI Photo/Terry Schmitt)
A sign announces the closure of the large cat exhibits at the San Francisco Zoo in San Francisco on January 3, 2008. The facility reopened to the public today following the Christmas day escape of a Tiger which killed one patron. (UPI Photo/Terry Schmitt) | License Photo

SAN FRANCISCO, Jan. 29 (UPI) -- The big cats in the San Francisco Zoo will be more strictly confined when they go back on public display for the first time since a tiger killed a teenager.

Contractors are completing work on the lion and tiger enclosures, the San Francisco Chronicle reported. When the exhibit reopens to the public, scheduled for Feb. 7, the tigers will be surrounded by wire mesh 19 feet high.

Advertisement

The new defenses at the zoo include surveillance cameras in areas where dangerous animals are kept, electronic alarms for escapes and moats with wires that carry a light electrical charge to shock would-be escapees.

The Siberian tiger that escaped on Christmas Day also mauled two brothers. At the time, zoo officials suggested that one or more of the three might have provoked the escape and attack.

At a public hearing Monday, Nick Podell, chairman of the San Francisco Zoological Society, said the three couldn't be blamed for the attack even if they did something.

"Under no circumstances is it OK for an animal to escape its enclosure," he said. "I want to deliver a mea culpa for the zoo. There is no excuse."

Advertisement

Latest Headlines