Jordan-Jaguar97
Well-Known Member
Thanks Pertinax well up here is ok but down London is worse so depends what the weather's like
Hi, I was reading about the Hippos history and saw the intials DNS after births, What does this stand for? I also wonder if Dublin Zoo is going to try and breed Heidi with the older male Henri?
At least now he has company and a mate, and Hoovie has a new family too!
A quick question Pertinax, regarding your hippo listing. Why have you seemingly put 1 animal under 2 names????![]()
I think this is very interesting and well done for Whipsnade for breeding so many hippos in their history. But I can't quite understand what you mean with the bold names?Whipsnade's breeding pair Henry & Belinda arrived there in 1950 (aged two)
Henry fathered 24(!) calves at Whipsnade, some by his own daughter Wendy who was born in 1967(including the female Wanda/Linda that went to Dublin) but 14 of those DNS. (Henry died in 1993, Belinda in 1995.) Its remarkable how many Hippo births are of calves that die almost straight away- in zoos everywhere.
Dublin-have had several different hippos, including a couple of males also born at Whipsnade Zoo,(they died) but the relevant ones are;
male Tom/Henri from Rotterdam (born in Amsterdam)
female Wanda/Linda from Whipsnade (born Whipsnade 1974 Henry x Wendy)
This pair bred several times at Dublin but some calves DNS. Others went to Longleat and Woburn. Hoover/Hoovie(9) was the last that survived.
After Linda's death from swallowing the tennis ball Dublin acquired the young female Heidi from Basel Zoo. She has bred once (in 2006), but it was a DNS. Fathered by the old male Henri.
So Hoover/Hoovie is a direct descendant of Henry/Belinda. With him gone to Whipsnade, Dublin still have(?) a pair- the old male Henri and younger female Heidi.
The same SB also lists West Midlands with 11 Hippos- largest group in Europe, but with no male at all- the last was 'Garfield' which died in 2006.
Well I have never heard Hoovie being called Hoover before, it has always been Hoovie.
Thanks for answering. I think this is strange I hadn't actually realised animals had more than one name. But then again most people have more than one name. I bet if they put us all in a stud book they'd list our zoo chat name along with our real names.Oh, right, see what you mean now..
Its where the animal has had more than one name through its life. They sometimes get changed if the animal moves or gets a nickname given it by keepers. The previous name is usually shown on the studbook listing also to avoid any doubt about what individual it is.
Another example here is the old male Hippo at Dublin- Tom/Henri- he's now called Henri.
Thanks for answering. I think this is strange I hadn't actually realised animals had more than one name.