animal news

It’s a Bad Time to Be a Giraffe in Denmark

Giraffe Kiringo stands in his enclosure on March 8, 2013 at the zoo in Duisburg, western Germany. Kiringo is the father of a 1,70 meters tall male baby giraffe that was born during the night to March 5, 2013 at the zoo. AFP PHOTO / BERND THISSEN GERMANY OUT (Photo credit should read BERND THISSEN/AFP/Getty Images)
Photo: BERND THISSEN/AFP/Getty Images

After a Danish zoo killed one of its giraffes, Marius, and fed the carcass to its lions, another says it may have to follow suit, putting down a genetically redundant male giraffe to make room for a new female it hopes to breed. “We will of course try to place him in a suitable zoo, but if that is not possible, we might have to euthanize him,” zoologist Jesper Mohring-Jensen, of the Jyllands Park Zoo, told CNN. The name of the possibly doomed animal is also redundant: He’s called Marius.

It’s a Bad Time to Be a Giraffe in Denmark