Kinah Meets the Troop
Posted at 3:21 pm March 20, 2007 by Janet Hawes
Installment #3
(Read Installment #2 here.)
On December 12, 2006, we brought Kinah down to Ituri Forest for a visit. The Allen’s swamp monkey group was brought into the back bedrooms for the session. Each member of the troop filed down to check out the newcomer with calm interest. Marbelina’s reaction was very different, though, from the rest of the monkeys; she clearly remembered that this was her baby. With frustration, she tried repeatedly to reach through the partition and grab Kinah.
Hoping that Marbelina would eventually calm down, we visited a few more times during the next week but the response was the same and keepers and curators became concerned. If Marbelina, the least dominant female in the group, continued or escalated this frantic behavior, it might well harm her fragile status within the monkey group. Kinah still needed frequent bottle feedings and would need to make daily trips to our nursery; would Marbelina calmly return her baby to us each time? Additionally, Marbelina had been seen breeding with the male; if she became pregnant again, how could she care for two youngsters so close in age? It would not be in Marbelina’s best interest to try to reintroduce Kinah to her.
We decided to let Kinah fill out a little and try again in a month. During this time we would concentrate on getting some weight on our little charge and examining our options for a social introduction with another animal in our collection. By mid-January, Kinah had improved enormously. Given her tiny size and poor condition when she arrived, we were somewhat concerned that she might display other deficits. Our fears were unfounded. Kinah’s size may have been small, but her accomplishments and abilities were not. She quickly learned to climb, then to hop, leap, and launch herself headlong from perch to perch. We gave her a larger, more challenging enclosure twice the size of the first and she fearlessly mastered the area within days. Kinah’s vocalizations became varied and she would have “something to say” about all the comings and goings in the nursery. She also became fascinated with water; true to her “swampy” natural habitat, Kinah was keen to wash her food and take short dips in her water bowl.
Supplying interesting enrichment items is part of caring for any primate in captivity. Kinah’s enrichment items were always anxiously awaited and enjoyed; she immediately recognized a novel item and had fun thoroughly investigating and manipulating it. Her fondest desire was to explore the nursery, looking in everything with great relish. Occasionally, Kinah found a Zoo visitor either fascinating or frightening, as the mood would strike her. Seldom have we ever seen a primate in the nursery with more personality.
Janet Hawes is a senior keeper in the primate nursery of the Children’s Zoo at the San Diego Zoo.
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March 20th, 2007 at 6:50 pm
Thanks, Janet, waiting anxiously again for the next installment. I hope that Marbelina has since calmed down and has accepted Kinah in a way that they can be aquainted. Otherwise is there somewhere else at the animal park or zoo where you can release Kinah to be in a troop on her own as she gets stronger and bigger?
It is sad to think of her having to live in an artificial, although very entertaining and educating, Nursery.
March 21st, 2007 at 7:07 am
Oh my gosh look how TINY she is!! Janet hurry up with your next installment!!
March 22nd, 2007 at 10:20 am
Poor Marbelina as I am sure that she is confused. Hopefully soon she will have a new healthy baby to take care of and put her mind off Kinah. Poor little mama.
March 22nd, 2007 at 4:38 pm
What a wonderful account of this precious and precocious little girl. I can hardly wait for the next installment. Where is she now? I must see her.
March 27th, 2007 at 2:01 pm
Carole-
I am sorry to say that Kinah’s introduction is being conducted in an off exhibit area, so there is no way to watch the action right now. However, stay tuned to the rest of the story. More news is coming.
Thank you,
Janet