Chilean zoo jabs big cats, orangutan against Covid-19

A Borneo orangutan named Sandai watches a worker holding a syringe with a dose of an experimental vaccine against COVID-19 made by the Zoetis veterinary laboratory during a vaccination drill at the Buin Zoo in Buin, Chile, on December 28, 2021. (Photo by JAVIER TORRES / AFP)

by Paulina ABRAMOVICH
Agence France-Presse

BUIN, Chile (AFP) – Bengal tiger Charly and Bornean orangutan Sandai, both members of endangered species, have received coronavirus vaccines at a Chilean zoo in a Latin American first.

Charly, Sandai and eight other animals at the Buin Zoo in Santiago were chosen for the experimental vaccine campaign as they belong to species considered at high risk of contracting Covid-19.

The viral disease which has killed more than 5.4 million humans so far, has also been found in zoo monkeys, apes and big cats, as well as in deer in the wild, in house pets and in minks.

A worker loads a syringe with a dose of an experimental vaccine against COVID-19 made by the Zoetis veterinary laboratory, at the Buin Zoo in Buin, Chile, on January 3, 2022. (Photo by Javier TORRES / AFP)

Along with three lions, two other tigers and three pumas, three-year-old Charly and Sandai, 26, received their second dose Monday of an experimental vaccine developed especially for animals but not yet available for sale.

The received their first shots on December 13.

“The idea is to protect the animals that are most susceptible to contracting the coronavirus while testing whether the vaccines generate immunity and, if yes, how long it lasts,” said Sebastian Celis, head of the Buin Zoo’s veterinary department.

A Bengal tiger named Charly receives an experimental dose of a vaccine against COVID-19 made by the Zoetis veterinary laboratory, at the Buin Zoo in Buin, Chile, on January 3, 2022. (Photo by Javier TORRES / AFP)

Lions in Singapore, Zagreb and Washington, hippos in Belgium, Sumatran tigers in Indonesia and gorillas in Atlanta, Georgia, are among captive animals reported to have contracted the virus to date.

Buin Zoo has not tested any of its animals for coronavirus as none have presented symptoms.

Several US zoos have announced vaccination campaigns for their animal populations.

Nearly 90 percent of Chile’s human population over the age of three have been fully vaccinated to date, and 62 percent have received a booster shot.

It is the only country in Latin America to have started vaccinating zoo animals.

A worker loads a syringe with a dose of an experimental vaccine against COVID-19 made by the Zoetis veterinary laboratory, at the Buin Zoo in Buin, Chile, on January 3, 2022. (Photo by Javier TORRES / AFP)