Auckland Zoo auckland also welcomes a new giraffe

Zoo's leggy new arrival | Stuff.co.nz
25 January 2012

Being the same size as an All Black lock forward means Auckland Zoo's latest arrival is no ordinary newborn.

The female giraffe, who doesn't yet have a name, was born just before 7pm last Monday and is the fourth calf produced by her mother Rukiya, 10, and father Zabulu, 13.

Rukiya's labour lasted for about three hours and the 1.8 metre-tall calf was up and walking around within 30 minutes.

Mother and child are doing well and have spent the last week in isolation so they have a chance to bond, Pridelands team leader Nat Sullivan says.

"In the wild her mum would usually be hiding her in long grass at the moment, so we're trying to simulate the wild as much as possible."

The calf is the 30th to have been born at the zoo but is the first girl Rukiya has given birth to.

This makes her quite valuable for the zoo's breeding programme, Ms Sullivan says.

The programme involves zoos from across New Zealand and Australia and the calf will be moving to one of them within the next 18 months as there are already three girls in her herd.

"We have to do it before she gets too big to transport," Ms Sullivan says. "That's the logistical side to working with giraffes."

She says the breeding programme is important because two out of nine giraffe subspecies are listed as endangered.

Rukiya and her calf will be gradually integrated into the Pridelands section of the zoo, along with the zebra and ostrichs, over the next few weeks.

Zabulu and Rukiya's other two calves, Jelani and Forrest, are taking part in the breeding programme in Australia. Their first calf died while very young.

gotta love zoo PC-speak: "She says the breeding programme is important because two out of nine giraffe subspecies are listed as endangered." [Auckland's giraffes being a generic hybrid mix]
 
I still think its a shame that the Rothschilds breeding program had to be abanded. That is a good example of why it is nessecary to start with a good number of founder animals.
 
In the artical Childonias posted it states there are 3 femnales allready there and that that is why she will be moving in the next 18 months but there is only rukiya and karaka there besides zabulu whats up with that ???
 
it may be that the reporter confused what she was told by the zoo (two females plus the new female baby equals three females, and perhaps the reporter thought there were three females plus the new baby)
 
gotta love zoo PC-speak: "She says the breeding programme is important because two out of nine giraffe subspecies are listed as endangered." [Auckland's giraffes being a generic hybrid mix]

Except for Zabulu, who is pure Rothschilds. But yes, creating more hybrids doesn't help anyway.
 
Zoo's new baby giraffe has a name | Stuff.co.nz
1 February 2012

The latest leggy addition to the Auckland Zoo has finally been named by her keepers.

The giraffe calf, born on January 16, has been named Nakuru - the place in Kenya where Rothschild giraffes are found.
Rothschild giraffes are one of the most endangered giraffe subspecies.

Nakuru is the fourth offspring from the zoo's resident giraffes Rukiya and Zabulu - who is a Rothschild giraffe - and the 30th calf to be born at the zoo.

The calf, which stands around 1.8m tall, is still being kept in her own enclosure and is let out for around an hour a day.

She is expected to be allowed back in the paddock with the other giraffes, zebra and ostriches later this month.

Both mum and baby have been checked out by the vet and are in good health.

.............
 
For no reason other than the gender of a giraffe that held this name before, I think of it as a male name.
 
Futher details on the proposed new Giraffe house
Giraffes to get new home at Auckland zoo | Stuff.co.nz

When you say 'further details', do you mean that this is the first mention of this to ever appear on ZooChat, or are there more details somewhere here that I have missed?

Here is the article anyway:

Auckland Zoo is searching for a contractor to fill a tall order: a brand new house for its three resident giraffes.

The proposed building site will be located at the second paddock to the rear of the Kidzone building.

The building will house Rikya and Zabulu, and their calf Nakuru born on January 16. The calf is the fourth offspring to be born from the pair and is the 30th to be born at the zoo.

Auckland Zoo spokeswoman Grace Honney said the tender was being sought as part of standard upgrades.

"It's a new display house for our giraffes, so it will be very important to have a facility where the animals can stay over night," she said.

"It's part of our normal upgrade process."

According to a tender for the construction, the site is the most suitable "as it allows good animal movement between the proposed and existing facility and includes good vehicle access for activities such as giraffe exchanges and facility maintenance".

During the construction, the animals will be allowed to stay in their keep and will have their own area while the facility is being upgraded.

The tender proposes that the work will involve minor earthworks, retaining works, steel portal construction, building fit-out and commissioning, footpath access way construction, water and sewer reticulation, power reticulation, landscaping and fencing.

No surrounding buildings or fences will be upgraded.

I don't really understand the sentence in bold, clearly a house is going to have to provide night-time accommodation for the giraffes. Does she mean while construction of the new house occurs? Also, it is unclear whether the old house will remain after construction, anyone know if it will or not?

While I have no problem with a new giraffe house at all, even at the expense of an unused paddock in the Kids Zoo, I really do not want it to be a display house, where the visitors can see the giraffes, either from inside or outside, which is what the article suggests. This is because, to allow visitors to see the giraffe, access will have to come from the Kids Zoo, which will mean that it will be possible to view Pridelands animals from outside this precinct, which will reduce the immersion effect of this area, imho. Plus, it would seem to be a waste of money. Auckland's giraffes are almost never off-show due to poor weather (cf. Giraffe in other NZ zoos), and if they ever were, there would be very few visitors there anyway.
 
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Are there any plans for more giraffe? As I understand it they have only the three now.
 
Are there any plans for more giraffe? As I understand it they have only the three now.
they should have four shouldn't they? The male Zabulu, the female Rukyia, the female Kiraka from Taronga, and the new female calf Nakuru.
 
Thta's what I thought but the article mentions three unless Kiraka will be housed seperately
 
they should have four shouldn't they? The male Zabulu, the female Rukyia, the female Kiraka from Taronga, and the new female calf Nakuru.

Although all news articles say kiraka was on her way from Sydney to auckland she was born in dubbo and went straight from there to melbourne. then on to NZ.
 
Although all news articles say kiraka was on her way from Sydney to auckland she was born in dubbo and went straight from there to melbourne. then on to NZ.
oh, really? That's weird. Never trust the media I always say!
 
Thats the problem with Taronga at the front of WPZ. it causes a lot of confusion.

oh wait I got doubly confused. When you said Dubbo I was thinking Werribee!! Saying she came from Taronga is an understandable mistake then if she came from Dubbo. But not so much if she had come from Werribee!! :D
 
I caught the tail end of a zoo documentary on TV last night about a young female giraffe's move from TWPZ to Auckland Zoo, stormy seas and all. Can anyone put a time stamp on when this move occurred? I have no idea when the doco was filmed. Also, how is the giraffe doing at Auckland now?
 
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