Just found this article and I am wondering as to wether the new baby is the grandchild of Stripes and Twiga through their son Mowgli?
Toledo Zoo giraffe gives birth to 160-lb. baby girl
BY TOM HENRY
BLADE STAFF WRITER
Elvira, a Masai giraffe, nuzzles her newborn, which arrived at 8:18 p.m. Saturday. The baby is nearly 6 feet tall. - TOLEDO ZOO
The Toledo Zoo's new baby giraffe is cute and cuddly and all that.
But let's put our giddiness on hold for a second to consider what Mama Giraffe, aka Elvira, went through when she gave birth on Saturday night.
First, there was a 15-month pregnancy. That's a long time for any mammal, let alone a giraffe, to carry an unborn offspring.
Giraffes are like humans in one respect: We both have seven vertebrae in our necks.
But ask women what they'd think of a 15-month pregnancy. Odds are likely, to put it mildly, most would agree that nine months is more than enough.
Long pregnancy or not, the wait is over. The zoo's latest infant was born at 8:18 p.m. Saturday. She stood 50 minutes later and started nursing at 10:40 p.m., said Randi Meyerson, the zoo's curator of mammals.
"Everything's going really well," said Ms. Meyerson. "We're excited. We're really happy they're doing well on their own."
The size of Elvira's calf is also worth mentioning.
The baby girl, who hasn't yet been named, was nearly 6 feet tall and 160 pounds at birth.
Enough said about what Elvira went through there, even though that's about average for a giraffe baby.
Most giraffes, according to online resources, give birth standing up. And the labor typically lasts two to six hours.
Full disclosure: We did not witness this event firsthand, perhaps because the zoo has regulations prohibiting intruders from entering the birthing area of a 1,500 or 2,000-pound mammal that instinctively tries to protect its newborns by stomping hyenas and lions with its hooves. According to the Web site answers.com, 50 to 75 percent of the giraffes born in the wild die in the first few months because of attacks by predators.
So hats off to Elvira, who had a relatively uneventful pregnancy and birthing experience this time, Ms. Meyerson said.
The giraffe's first baby was a stillborn. Its second was a male, Enzi, born two weeks prematurely on Dec. 26, 2009.
Elvira's milk came in late for Enzi.
But the zoo helped Enzi pull through with colostrum -- early milk from a cow -- then switched over to his mother's milk once she began producing it days later.
There were no delays in Elvira's milk production this time, Ms. Meyerson said.
Ms. Meyerson didn't give a date, but said she expected veterinarians to allow Elvira and her latest baby to go on exhibit within a couple of weeks.
Baby Giraffe joins Lucas the elephant-- so named by the public during a contest -- as the second baby animal born to the zoo this summer.
Unlike Lucas, the giraffe will be named by the keepers, as is traditionally how it works for animals that aren't as high-profile to zoo visitors, zoo spokesman Andi Norman said.
Regardless, the new baby probably will get just as many "oohs" and "aahs" from visitors.
"When [zoo-goers] see animals that were born at our zoo, that shows that the zoo field entrusts us to breed and raise them based on our expertise, our staffing, our care of the animals," Ms. Norman said.
The father of both Enzi and the newborn female giraffe is Mowgli.
The family is part of a species known as Masai giraffes, the tallest mammals on Earth.
Characterized by their dark brown splotches, Masai giraffes typically grow to heights of 16 to 20 feet.
Males are larger, growing to weights of 3,000 pounds or more.
Giraffes are normally walkers, but can run as fast as 35 mph when startled.
Elvira came to Toledo from the Cleveland Zoo in 2004, three years after Mowgli came from the Toronto Zoo in 2001.
The zoo has another Masai giraffe named Charlotte.
"People love them. They bond with them," Ms. Meyerson said of giraffes in general. "They're sort of like a flagship species for African exhibits."