News Archive
Filter By
- Abyssinian ground hornbill
- Addax
- Aldabra tortoise
- Allen's swamp monkey
- Alpaca
- American alligator
- American bison
- American flamingo
- American wigeon
- Andean bear
- Aquatic caecilian
- Arapaima
- Asian elephant
- Asian small-clawed otter
- Asian water dragon
- Australian snake-necked turtle
- Bald eagle
- Baltimore oriole
- Barred owl
- Beaver
- Bennett's wallaby
- Binturong
- Black-and-white ruffed lemur
- Black-and-white warbler
- Black-crowned night heron
- Black-footed ferret
- Black-tailed prairie dog
- Black-throated blue warbler
- Blue-billed curassow
- Blue crane
- Bobcat
- Brown pelican
- Bufflehead
- California sea lion
- Canvasback
- Cedar waxwing
- Channel catfish
- Cheetah
- Chicken
- Chinese alligator
- Chinese three-striped box turtle
- Clouded leopard
- Collared brown lemur
- Common raven
- Common yellowthroat
- Corals and sea anemones (anthozoa)
- Cow
- Crocodile monitor
- Cuban crocodile
- Dama gazelle
- Degu
- Eastern indigo snake
- Eastern newt
- Eastern red-backed salamander
- Eastern screech-owl
- Eld's deer
- Electric eel
- Emperor newt
- Emperor tamarin
- Fennec fox
- Fishing cat
- Gaboon viper
- Geoffroy's marmoset
- Gharial
- Giant leaf-tailed gecko
- Giant panda
- Goat
- Golden-headed lion tamarin
- Golden lion tamarin
- Gray seal
- Gray wolf
- Green tree python
- Grevy's zebra
- Guam kingfisher (sihek)
- Guam rail (ko’ko’)
- Guinea pig
- Harbor seal
- Hartmann's mountain zebra
- Hawk-headed parrot
- Hellbender
- Home's hinge-back tortoise
- Hooded crane
- Iranian fat-tailed gecko
- Japanese giant salamander
- King vulture
- Komodo dragon
- Kori bustard
- Kunekune pig
- Land hermit crab
- Larger Malay mouse-deer
- Lemur leaf frog
- Lesser kudu
- Lesser Madagascar hedgehog tenrec
- (-) Lion
- Loggerhead shrike
- Long-tailed chinchilla
- Maned wolf
- Meerkat
- Miniature donkey
- Naked mole-rat
- North American porcupine
- North American river otter
- Northern Luzon giant cloud rat
- Northern pintail
- Northern red salamander
- Northern snakehead fish
- Northern tree shrew
- North Island brown kiwi
- Norway rat
- Orangutan
- Orchard oriole
- Ossabaw Island hog
- Ostrich
- Ovenbird
- Pale-headed saki monkey
- Pallas's cat
- Panamanian golden frog
- Patagonian mara
- Persian onager
- Philippine crocodile
- Prehensile-tailed porcupine
- Prevost's squirrel
- Przewalski's horse
- Pygmy slow loris
- Red-crowned crane
- Red-fronted lemur
- Red-rumped agouti
- Red-winged blackbird
- Red panda
- Red River hog
- Red ruffed lemur
- Red wolf
- Ring-tailed lemur
- Ruddy duck
- Schmidt's red-tailed monkey
- Scimitar-horned oryx
- Screaming hairy armadillo
- Siamang
- Sitatunga
- Sloth bear
- Southern lesser galago
- Southern swamp sparrow
- Southern tamandua
- Spider tortoise
- Striped skunk
- Swainson's thrush
- Tanagers
- Tentacled snake
- Tiger
- Titi monkey
- Turkey
- Twig catfish
- Two-toed sloth
- Vietnamese mossy frog
- Virginia opossum
- Von der Decken's hornbill
- Western lowland gorilla
- White-cheeked gibbon
- White-naped crane
- White-nosed coati
- Whooping crane
- Yellow-breasted chat
Displaying 1 - 25 of 46 articles.

An Update on African Lion Shera
Recently, our Great Cats team bid farewell to African lion Amahle, who moved to another zoo to breed. Keeper Katy Juliano shares how Amahle's mother, Shera, is adjusting in this update.

Do Lions Actually Purr? And Other Questions, Answered
Few animals are as regarded—and feared—as the largest carnivores of the African savannah. But how much do you really know about lions?

How to Take a Lioness to the Vet
Even lions have to go to the doctor! Luckily for our lioness Shera, that just involves a short ride to our on-site veterinary hospital in a new, state-of-the art veterinary ambulance.

African Lion Dies at the Smithsonian’s National Zoo and Conservation Biology Institute
Staff at the Smithsonian’s National Zoo and Conservation Biology Institute are mourning the loss of Luke, an African lion who was humanely euthanized Oct. 19. He was 17 years old.

Lion Dies at Smithsonian’s National Zoo and Conservation Biology Institute
Staff at the Smithsonian’s National Zoo and Conservation Biology Institute are grieving the loss of Nababiep, a female African lion affectionately called Naba, who was humanely euthanized Sept. 26. She was 18 years old.

How Do You Care for an Aging Lion?
As animals age, they have more health care needs. Fortunately, our lions are eager to participate in training that helps us care for them!

Lions and Tigers Recovering Well at Smithsonian’s National Zoo
The lions and tigers at the Smithsonian’s National Zoo who tested presumptive positive for COVID-19 the week of Sept. 13 are behaving and eating normally.
Update on COVID-19 Positive Great Cats at the Smithsonian’s National Zoo
The lions and tigers at the Smithsonian’s National Zoo continue to be treated for COVID-19. All tigers and lions, including the three lions noted of concern in the Sept. 24 update, are improving and eating.

Update on COVID-19 Positive Great Cats at the Smithsonian’s National Zoo
The lions and tigers at the Smithsonian’s National Zoo continue to be treated for COVID-19. All tigers and three lions are eating normally and improving. Three lions are of greater concern.

How Do You Care for Animals That You Can’t Share a Space With?
How do animal keepers take a blood sample from an elephant or examine a big cat's teeth? Find out how training helps keepers care for animals that they can't share a physical space with in this update.

Pouncing On Enrichment: How to Care for Lions, Cheetahs and Other Great Cats
Lions, tigers, cheetahs and bobcats – let’s play! Keepers Katy Juliano, Adri Kopp and Amber Dedrick know how to get the big cats they work with pouncing, roaring and purring for enrichment.

Genomic Analysis Reveals Many Animal Species May Be Vulnerable to SARS-CoV-2 Infection
A new genomic study ranks the potential of the SARS-CoV-2 spike protein to bind to the ACE2 receptor site in 410 vertebrate animals. Old World primates and great apes, which have identical amino acids at the binding site as humans, are predicted to have a very high propensity for binding ACE2 and...

Bringing the Zoo to You: March 2020 Edition
From flamingo courtships to weekly weigh-ins for the African lions, the Smithsonian’s National Zoo is buzzing with beastly activity behind the scenes!

Keeping Up with the Great Cats: Lion Pride Edition
Fall is upon us, which means that it’s a great time to visit the Great Cats exhibit to see our African lions in action! When the temperature is between 45 and 65 degrees Fahrenheit, the cats are at their most frisky.
Male African Lions in Human Care Hit Puberty Earlier Than in the Wild
Lion cubs grow up fast, and even faster in zoos. In a long-term study, scientists at SCBI found that male African lions living in human care hit puberty a full year earlier than their counterparts in the wild.

The Best Father's Day in D.C. (We Ain't Lion)
Treat dad like the king (of the jungle) he is at the Smithsonian's National Zoo!

African Lion Luke Update
Visitors may have noticed that 12-year-old African lion Luke has had an on-again, off-again limp. As part of his treatment, the veterinary team is performing deep-tissue laser therapy, electroacupuncture and dry-needle acupuncture on the affected areas.

Earth Optimism: Saving the Savannah’s Great Cats
Sometimes, even top predators need a leg up in order to survive. The recent boom in Kenya’s human population prompted people to sprawl and build their homes on the savannah. As a result, increased competition among wildlife for territory, food, water and mates can spell trouble for many the animals.
Lion Q&A: How do you draw blood from an African lion?
For the first time in this pride, Zoo veterinarians have successfully drawn blood from a lion—a juvenile male named Jumbe—while he was awake. Keeper Rebecca Stites reveals what this means for the health and future of the lion pride in the latest Q&A. How do you draw blood from an African lion? With...
Science Q&A with Authors of New Lion Reproductive Study
A mystery: African lions are breeding, but they’re not producing cubs. Smithsonian Conservation Biology Institute science sleuths are on the case! Their goal: to determine the cause of the cub “bust” by studying the hormones in female lion feces. Their findings were published a PLOS-ONE paper...
Lion Cub Q&A: May 27, 2015
What does it take to keep up with a sextuplet of juvenile African lions? In the latest Keeper Q & A, Rebecca Stites and Kristen Clark dish on the cats' quirky personalities, training triumphs, and big changes to come. As the cubs grow, how do they behave toward their parents and each other? The...
Cub Q&A: Feb. 19, 2015
January 24 and March 2 mark our African lion cubs first birthdays! Animal keepers Kristen Clark and Rebecca Stites reveal what's new with the cubs in the latest Q&A! How have the cubs' personalities developed? Rebecca: The personality of each begins to show itself at just a few weeks old, and these...
Lion Cub Q&A: Oct 20, 2014
The six lion cubs at the Great Cats Exhibit are growing fast and their husbandry training sessions are in full swing! Parents Luke, Naba and Shera have their paws full with the rambunctious cubs—but it's our animal care team's challenge to care for the entire pride. Curator Craig Saffoe and keepers...
Lion Video Update Sept 15, 2014
Watch the latest from "Wild Inside the National Zoo." Video