A senior keeper at a New Zealand zoo has died after she was
attacked by one of its Sumatran tigers.
The attack by a
male tiger named Oz took place Sunday morning at Hamilton Zoo on New Zealand's
North Island, according to a statement posted
on the Hamilton City Council website.
The statement
didn't give details on the circumstances of the attack, but it said that the
tiger didn't escape from its enclosure.
"Our focus
at this time is on providing the adequate support for our staff and family
members who have been affected by this tragic incident," the statement
said.
Keeper remembered as 'talented, passionate'
The government-run zoo will be closed
until Thursday while police and other agencies investigate and a blessing of
the site is arranged, authorities said.
The woman who
was killed was identified as Samantha Kudeweh, the zoo's curator who was
responsible for the management of its animals.
"Samantha,
43, was recognized and respected globally as a talented, passionate and highly
knowledgeable conservation and zoo professional whose expertise and
understanding of animals was highly sought after by other zoos and captive
animal breeding programs," her family said in a statement
Monday on the Hamilton
City Council website.
Kudeweh had
worked at the city's zoo for 10 years and was married with two children, the
statement said.
Flowers were
laid outside the door to the zoo in tribute, CNN affiliate TVNZ reported.
Zoo decides not to euthanize endangered tiger
City authorities said Monday that zoo
officials have decided against euthanizing Oz, the 11-year-old tiger who killed
Kudeweh.
"Although there is an inherent risk for zoo professionals
who manage big cats like Oz, there is no wider ongoing risk," said Lance
Vervoort, Hamilton City Council's general manager for parks and other leisure
services. "There is no reason for us to put Oz down."
The council said
in a statement that
the prevailing view "among zoo professionals was that Oz's attack on
Samantha was in line with his natural instincts."
Oz arrived at
Hamilton Zoo from Auckland Zoo in 2013 to be matched up with a female tiger,
Sali, who later gave birth to two cubs, according to TVNZ.
Sumatran
tigers are a
critically endangered subspecies from Indonesia, of which fewer than 400
remain, according to the conservation group WWF.
"Oz is a
significant animal for his species," Vervoort said. "He is the father
of our two cubs, and he is vital to the ongoing breeding program to conserve
this rare species."
Hamilton Zoo says it has more than 600 animals,
including monkeys, zebras and cheetahs.
TVNZ reported
two previous deaths of keepers at animal parks in New Zealand in recent years,
one caused by a white tiger in 2009 and the other by an elephant in 2012.
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