Syracuse, N.Y. (September 4, 2013) – The Rosamond Gifford Zoo is pleased to announce the birth of a female Thorold’s white-lipped deer. Parents Fawn (mother) and Ty (father) welcomed the fawn on July 13. She is the pair’s first offspring.
The newborn was named Kaila by her keepers for Tibet’s Kailas mountain range, part of the Gangdisê Mountains where white-lipped deer are found in the wild. She weighed approximately 28 pounds at birth and has already doubled her birth weight.
“The Rosamond Gifford Zoo is thrilled to announce the addition of Kaila to our herd,” said Ted Fox, zoo director. “As one of only two accredited members of the Association of Zoos and Aquariums which breed white-lipped deer in the United States, this birth is significant to the North American population.”
White-lipped deer are native to Eastern Tibet, and are generally found on high hills and mountains. One of the largest deer species, they can reach six feet in length and weigh up to 600 pounds. White-lipped deer are herbivores and feed principally on grasses. Only males have antlers, which can grow to more than four feet in length and weigh up to 15 pounds each. Like reindeer (caribou), white-lipped deer make clicking noises with their hooves to keep the herd together in heavy snowfall. Their hooves are large and solid, which enable them to climb well. White-lipped deer are threatened in nature due to hunting, sale of their antlers and meat and habitat loss.
FUN FACT: White-lipped deer gain their name from the white markings in their deep brown summer coats, visible beneath the mouth and down the throat. In the winter, the brown coat is replaced by longer gray-brown hairs which make markings less obvious.
Kaila is currently on view with the herd in the white-lipped deer exhibit on the Wildlife Trail, across from Asian Elephant Preserve.