Meet the Maasai
Posted at 2:01 pm June 29, 2007 by Deb Erickson-Morris
There are some exciting things happening here at the Wild Animal Park this summer that you shouldn’t miss. This first bit of news I am just thrilled to talk about: we are honored to have here, from the Mbirikani Group Ranch in Kenya, Maasai tribesmen and women. Every time they walk by my shop (the Plant Trader) I get giddy with delight! They are such warmhearted and beautiful people.
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Greetings! My name is Maressa Takahashi, a fourth-year student at the University of California, Berkeley. I am majoring in biology with an emphasis on animal behavior, and I am excited to be working with
As we get ready to flip the page on the calendar to a new month, we find that not much has changed with Bai Yun (pictured). She is still behaving normally and doing just fine. Behind-the-scenes at the panda facility at the San Diego Zoo, she goes out into her off-exhibit classroom enclosure daily for a little fresh air and sunshine. She is eating heartily. She participates in regular ultrasounds as the veterinarians reacquaint her with the process. This regular routine will pay dividends later, when her hormones make her more cranky and lethargic; establishing a routine of such exams now will make it easier to coax her into ultrasounds as late as the last week of her pregnancy.
” One fish, two fish, red fish, blue fish”¦.”
Kinah has been in her new home on exhibit in Ituiri Forest for about three weeks now (see Kecia’s previous blog,
Spring is here and with it the Keauhou Bird Conservation Center’s (KBCC) busiest time of year. This year was especially exciting. The Hawaii Endangered Bird Conservation Program hatched its smallest chick yet! On May 31, 2007, the staff at KBCC hatched a Hawaiian ‘akepa (ah-KE-pa) weighing in at only 0.94 grams (less than 1/30 of an ounce). While the ‘akepa is thought to be the smallest passerine ever artificially incubated and hand-reared, in the past the hatchlings have weighed about 1.1 grams. To put this into perspective, here are a few items that also weigh 0.95 grams: 2 thumbtacks, 2 Q-tips, or 2 small paper clips. Or how about 1½ M&M’s (regular, NOT peanut!). A dime is more than twice as heavy as the little ‘akepa chick.
Su Lin has reached a milestone this week: she now weighs 50.1 kilograms, which is around 110 pounds! Since her move back into the public eye in late May, our girl is adjusting very well back on exhibit, learning ” the routine” down at the Panda Station.
Once Kinah and her group had been successfully introduced to the four juvenile swamp monkeys (see Kecia’s blog,
Just a few weeks ago, Kinah made the move from her human caretakers to living with her family of fellow Allen’s swamp monkeys. Bunzi is doing great as Kinah’s new ” mom” and Mr. Toad and Dixie are excellent adult role models for little Kinah.
An exciting change to Ituri Forest at the San Diego Zoo is the recent addition of more Allen’s swamp monkeys. Our older De Brazza’s guenon female, Sprite, was showing signs of anxiety from being in an exhibit with young swamp monkeys and otters. Discussions began about what animals WOULD enjoy living in Ituri Forest. It was decided to introduce another group of Allen’s swamp monkeys to the four young ones we currently have to make a very nice group of eight. The DeBrazza’s guenons Sprite and Chumu were relocated to another area of the Zoo and swamp monkeys Mr. Toad, Dixie, Bunzi, and baby Kinah (yes, little Kinah from the Children’s Zoo) came to us! (Read 