How Heavy Is Frank the Meerkat? London Zoo Weighs Its 14,000 Animals.

It can’t be easy to weigh a meerkat, but boy, does it look like fun.

A meerkat looks directly into the camera as he stands on a scale. A zookeeper is seated, holding a clipboard, which the meerkat is also holding.
Frank the meerkat taking his turn on the scale. Credit…Kirsty Wigglesworth/Associated Press

The London Zoo, which has more than 14,000 animals, conducted its annual weigh-in this week, an event that helps keep records on their health and other data up-to-date and measures the animals’ well being.

While zookeepers measure the animals throughout the year, every August they double-check all the information and invite news organizations to have a look.

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A man holds a wooden ruler on which a stick insect, which looks like a stick, is measured.
A variety of instruments were used to measure the animals, including a small wooden ruler for a stick insect.Credit…Neil Hall/EPA, via Shutterstock

“Having this data helps to ensure that every animal we care for is healthy, eating well, and growing at the rate they should,” Angela Ryan, the London Zoo’s head of zoological operations, said in a statement. “We record the vital statistics of every animal at the zoo — from the tallest giraffe to the tiniest tadpole.”

The zoo’s heaviest animal is Maggie, a giraffe, who comes in around 750 kilograms (about 1,653 pounds). Maggie lives with her sister, Molly, and was joined by another giraffe, Nuru, in March.

The zoo’s smallest animal is a leaf cutter ant, at about 5 milligrams. Zookeepers do not measure each ant individually, but use estimates based on the weight of an entire colony.

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A monkey runs along a fence as a woman sits on the grass in the background attempting to weigh it.
A squirrel monkey fleeing the weigh-in.Credit…Neil Hall/EPA, via Shutterstock

“We can tell a lot from an animal by its weight,” Ms. Ryan told a London radio station. The weigh-in can also measure how pregnant animals are doing, and can alert zookeepers to new pregnancies, which in turn helps with preparing for any births.

Zookeepers add the measurements and weights to the Zoological Information Management System, a database that is shared with other zoos around the world that includes information about threatened species. Conservationists in the wild can also use the information to determine the age of a particular endangered animal, for example.

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A gorilla wraps itself around a tree and places its hand on a yellow measuring tape showing the number seven.
Gernot, a western lowland gorilla, climbing the zoo’s measuring stick.Credit…Neil Hall/EPA, via Shutterstock

Weighing animals can be challenging. Zookeepers use different ways to get them to step — or hop, skip or jump — onto the scale and stand up straight for measurements.

This year, for example, the zookeepers tricked Humboldt penguin chicks into walking over scales one by one by having them line up for their morning feed, the zoo said. It took the promise of tasty treats to get some Bolivian black-capped squirrel monkeys onto the scales.

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Four penguins stand side by side. The second one from the left is on a scale.
Humboldt penguins gathering around the scale.Credit…Neil Hall/EPA, via Shutterstock