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A Danish zoo that made international headlines last month when it killed a healthy giraffe
is once again in the news after it killed four lions to make way for a new male. The
lions were killed Monday, said Tobias Stenbaek Bro, a spokesman for the Copenhagen Zoo.
Two of those were young lions that were not old enough to survive by themselves and would
have been killed by the new male lion if it had the chance, Bro told CNN. He said the
zoo had tried to place them elsewhere, "but unfortunately there wasn't any interest."
The other two are the youngsters' parents, described by the Copenhagen Zoo as a "very
old" breeding pair. The new male lion was brought from Givskud Zoo, also in Denmark,
to form a breeding group with the Copenhagen Zoo's two 18-month-old females, born on site
in 2012. The zoo had to put down the old lions and their young offspring "because of the
natural structure and behavior" of the lion pride, the Copenhagen Zoo said in a prepared
statement. The newcomer is about 3 years old, large for
his age and healthy, the zoo said. After he's had a few days to adjust to his new surroundings,
visitors will be able to see him. "He is a beautiful young male and I am certain he will
be an impressive ambassador for his species," zoo chief Steffen Straede is quoted as saying.
He said the three young lions would "be the foundation of the zoo's next lion era." The
decision by the Copenhagen Zoo to shoot dead its giraffe, named Marius, in February to
prevent inbreeding sparked widespread outrage. The killing of four healthy lions has prompted
further dismay. Some questioned why the lions weren't sent elsewhere if the Copenhagen Zoo
no longer had space. "Why are people visiting this abhorrent animal slaughter house," said
a message posted on a Facebook page that calls for the closure of the zoo. The European Association
of Zoos and Aquaria -- a body governing 345 institutions -- said that the Copenhagen Zoo
had not broken its codes of conduct and that it "has been consistent in its approach to
animal population management, and high standards of animal welfare." The zoo supports natural
cycles of reproduction and cub rearing, it said, and its lions are not part of a breeding
program. "While EAZA regrets the death of the animals in question, we recognize the
right of Copenhagen Zoo to humanely cull them in line with their policies," it added. Such
culling is not uncommon, although large animals are less likely to meet that fate. European
Association of Zoos and Aquaria spokesman David Williams-Mitchell told CNN that across
the European zoos governed by the body, about 3,000 to 5,000 animals are killed each year
under programs to manage zoo populations. This includes "everything from tadpoles and
insects up to charismatic megafauna like giraffes and lions," he said, adding that it represents
only 0.06% of the zoos' overall animal population. Exact figures are hard to come by, but a few
hundred of those killed by the zoos each year would be large animals, he said. Williams-Mitchell
added that members of the public and animal rights groups tend to object only when zoos
kill "cute, storybook animals," rather than rodents or tadpoles. Marius the giraffe was
shot by a veterinarian and dismembered in front of an audience that included children,
before being fed to the zoo's lions, tigers and leopards. Addressing criticism after that
killing, Bengt Holst, the zoo's scientific director, told CNN the decision was made for
the greater good of the giraffe population. "Our giraffes are part of an international
breeding program, which has a purpose of ensuring a sound and healthy population of giraffes,"
he said. But the explanation did little to appease public anger. The backlash prompted
another zoo in Denmark to reverse course. Jyllands Park Zoo had said it was considering
culling one of its male giraffes if a female was brought in to breed. But it backtracked.