
This week, staff at
Tokyo's Ueno Zoo practiced capturing escaped animals by chasing around
one of their colleagues wearing a gorilla suit.
Visitors gaped as scores
of helmet-wearing keepers surrounded the "gorilla" with cars and nets.
Staff then pretended to tranquilize their coworker, who swooned
dramatically and collapsed to the ground.
The acting ape was immediately wrapped in a large net and hauled away on a truck.
The escaped animal drill
at the Tokyo zoo is conducted every other year, and this time zookeeper
Natsumi Uno was chosen to wear the animal costume.
"In our work there may be
times when we need to capture an animal, but we would never be the ones
being captured," Uno told reporters.
"So I tried to feel what an animal might feel and realized when they were on the run they would be scared. That's how I felt."
But some onlookers were barely moved. One Japanese user posted on Twitter, "Ueno Zoo's escape drill wasn't tense at all."
Another wrote, "The gorilla escape drill was so laid back! Made me laugh."
The practice is part of
the city's earthquake preparedness drills, where city workers prepare
for scenarios that may occur in the event of an earthquake.
That includes capturing raging beasts.
In the past, the Ueno
Zoo has tried using different animal outfits: In 2004, two men ran
around the zoo while wearing a giant papier-mâché rhinoceros over their
heads.
The technique isn't just
Japanese -- in 2012, the Franklin Park Zoo in Boston, Massachusetts
practiced capturing an employee in a giraffe costume. The year before
that, zookeepers in China "caught" a man dressed as Tigger from the
"Winnie the Pooh" cartoon.
Of course, real animals are more difficult to catch.
When an actual monkey
escaped from the Ueno Zoo in 2010, it took six hours before officials
finally netted it in the basement of a neighboring restaurant.
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