PHOTOS: Baby boom at Whipsnade Zoo

ZSL have welcomed a whole host of new arrivals

Author: Dan GoodingPublished 22nd Apr 2021

There's been a baby-boom at Whipsnade Zoo - with a monkey, a yak calf and piglets among the new arrivals.

The Zoo say these new arrivals are a boost after a tough year.

The as-yet-unnamed baby White-faced saki monkey (Pithecia pithecia) was born to mum Kaituma and dad Milagre on 10 March, but keepers are not yet able to tell the sex of the tiny primate.

If female, the white-faced saki monkey will retain its brown and golden coat, but if male will go on to develop the distinctive black hair and white face that gives the species its name. In photos snapped by the Zoo's keepers, the tiny brown monkey can be seen poking out from between its mum's legs, as it hangs onto her belly.

Animal Manager Matt Webb said:

"This week for the first time, the baby saki monkey has begun to move around onto mum Kaituma's back, where he or she will spend the next few months before venturing out on its own.

"The other female of the group, two-year-old Inca, has also taken her turn babysitting, carrying the baby around for a while on her back to give Kaituma a break.

"That's how female saki monkeys learn about child-rearing - they get hands-on experience from a very young age."

A larger arrival delighted keepers on 20 March, when female yak (Bos grunniens) Hermione gave birth to a calf, named Snape by his keepers.

Matt continued:

"Little Snape was up on his feet and bouncing around the paddock within hours of being born.

"He loves to play with the other young yaks, Fred, George and Ginny, and we can already see the very beginnings of his horns, which start growing from birth.

"Hermione is a wonderful mum. Yak mothers are very protective, as, in the wild, they have to protect their young from snow leopards and wolves. That's why they have such big horns." Yaks grow long hair and store fat very efficiently in their bodies which enables them to withstand incredibly low temperatures in the Himalayas.

All across the Zoo, free-roaming animals, such as Red-necked wallabies (Macropus rufogriseus rufogriseus), which bounce all over the 600 acre site, have also been expanding their families in the spring sunshine.

Visitors to the Zoo may spot wallaby mothers with joeys in their pouches. Female wallabies, unlike most mammals, are able to have a "conveyor belt" of babies, sometimes simultaneously carrying an embryo in their uterus, a small joey nursing in their pouch and a larger ("toddler") joey alongside them.

Meanwhile, at the Zoo's farm, two large litters of woolly, Mangalitsa piglets (Sus scrofa domesticus) - a rare, Hungarian breed of pig - were born to mums Blanka and Marja, delighting the Zoo's younger visitors. Born stripey, the pigs are already beginning to grow their strangely sheep-like woolly coats.

Matt Webb continued:

"After such a difficult year, seeing the Zoo filled with people, as well as new life, feels like just what the doctor ordered.

"We're looking forward to safely welcoming back many more visitors and members over the spring and summer, so it's lovely that there will be brand new animals for them to discover upon their return."

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