A healthy 18-month-old giraffe named聽 on Sunday at . Despite several online petitions鈥攇arnering nearly 27,000 signatures from around the globe鈥攖o save him, Marius was put down to prevent inbreeding, according to zoo officials.
Copenhagen Zoo does not promote castration to manage populations within zoo enclosures, selecting instead to kill “surplus offspring.” Representatives say this mimics the animals’ natural life.
Although a Swedish zoo begged to save Marius and one billionaire offered to buy him for several million dollars, the giraffe was killed, cut apart, and fed to lions in front of a crowd of onlookers that included small children.
While Americans supplied the most signatures on the petitions to save Marius, in Denmark the event was not seen as unusual. In a society with few animal-rights activists, the keeping and killing of animals is widely accepted, , a professor of bioethics at the University of Copenhagen. Public animal dissections are also popular in Denmark and regularly see upwards of 7,000 paying attendees.