Jalur_Tiger_Cub
Well-Known Member
ok. Plans must have changed or the print out must have been wrong.
15 April 2013
A giraffe born and raised at Auckland Zoo will begin a five day journey to Melbourne today to be part of an Australasian breeding programme.
Nakuru, who stands at 3 metres tall and weighs nearly 500 kilograms, will depart the zoo this morning and travel through the streets of Grey Lynn and Mt Eden before arriving at the Auckland Port around 2pm.
Pridelands team leader Nat Sullivan said residents might be able to catch a glimpse of the African-native during her travels, as the crate she is in has an open roof for her to stick her head out.
"She's a really confident animal, she's not scared of much.
Sullivan said while the 15-month-old would be missed at the zoo, she was sure Nakuru would be taken care of at her new home.
"I know she's going to another really good zoo, and I know she'll be really well looked after there."
Nakuru has been undergoing crate-training for the past month to prepare her for the long journey, as well as being vaccinated and fitted with a micro-chip containing identification information.
"We will be spending a lot of time with her and checking on her regularly, which will hopefully help her feel secure," said Sullivan.
The zookeeper will accompany Nakuru onboard the ship to Australia, where she will spend her first in month in quarantine at Weribee Open Range Zoo before heading to Melbourne Zoo.
Aucklanders have the opportunity today to farewell one of our most popular residents. Giraffe Nakuru is being shipped to Australia, after delighting Auckland Zoo visitors since her birth 15 months ago.
Aucklanders may catch a glimpse of Nakuru as she makes her way through suburban streets en route to the Ports of Auckland between approximately 5.30pm and 6.30pm.
"Nakuru is the most confident, interactive and well behaved giraffe calf I have ever worked with. My team and I will miss her, but her departure is for a good cause," says Pridelands team leader Nat Sullivan. Auckland Zoo is part of an Australasian regional breeding programme for giraffes, and Nakuru is crossing the Tasman to be paired up with a male giraffe at Melbourne Zoo.
Nat Sullivan will accompany Nakuru onboard along with keeper David Crimp and vet Dr Bethany Jackson. Onboard 'giraffe luggage' for Nakuru's trip includes food, enrichment devices like boomer balls, and medical supplies. "I'm hoping that the weather will be fairly settled on the trip over. But we will be spending a lot of time with her and checking on her regularly, which will hopefully help her feel secure," says Nat.
Moving giraffes between zoos requires considerable preparation both prior to boarding, and during the voyage. Nakuru has been vaccinated and micro-chipped with identification information, and 'crate trained' to enter her 4.2m high crate. Nakuru will initially go to Werribee Open Range Zoo for a month (for the quarantine), and then onto Melbourne Zoo.
Maersk Line New Zealand Marketing Manager David Gulik says the unusual cargo presented some unusual challenges: "Any cargo that is not the standard size and shape requires a bit of extra planning to ensure we make the best possible use of the space available. To minimise disruption for Nakuru we will load her last, so we've had to organise the rest of the loading around that. We also need to keep her safe and well-protected, and make it easy for Nat, David and Bethany to get to her during the voyage. It's rare for us to transport live animals, but we're delighted to have the opportunity to support the regional breeding programme," says Mr Gulik.
While the team at Auckland Zoo are sad to lose Nakuru, herd numbers will soon be back up. Female Rukiya is pregnant and due in July, so another new giraffe is on the way, and the Pridelands team will be busy preparing for the new arrival.
Fast facts
- Nakuru was born at Auckland Zoo on 15 January 2012, so she will be 15 months old on the day of her departure.
- Nakuru is approximately 3m tall and weighs approximately 480kg.
- Prior to Nakuru's birth, there had been only male giraffes born at Auckland Zoo for the past 26 years, apart from Ntombi in 2007.
- The crate weighs 2.5 tonnes, is 4.2m high, 2.8m deep and 2.8m wide - this gives Nakuru enough room to sit down if she wants to.
- Nakuru will travel inside the crate on a truck from Auckland Zoo to the Ports of Auckland around 5.30pm on Monday, 15 April. The route will be: Old Mill Road (Gate 3), Motions Road, Great North Road, St Lukes Road, Balmoral Road, Mt Eden Road (through Mt Eden shops), Symonds Street, Anzac Ave, Beach Road.
- Follow us on Twitter (@aucklandzoo) - we'll be live-tweeting Nakuru's journey through the streets of Auckland
- The Zoo expects Nakuru to put her head out of the crate as she travels along and this is most likely when she is stopped at traffic lights.
- Nakuru is expected to arrive at the Ports of Auckland around 6.30pm on Monday, 15 April. She will then be lifted by crane aboard the ship, JPO Scorpius.
- The voyage to Australia will take 5 days.
New Zealand is currently in need of (unrelated) male giraffes in New Zealand as both Wellington Zoo and Orana Wildlife Park are both in need of new breeding bulls.
Wellington Zoo may import the young bull born at Auckland Zoo this year, but will have to wait another three years for him to mature. With Wellington Zoo's potential breeding female Zahara (2004) getting on in years, they may be looking for other options.
Orana Wildlife Park will almost certainly import from overseas as any male from Auckland descends from the Harold-Zabulu line and will be related to Zuri and Harriet. Zuri, Tunu and Harriet are all pure bred Rothchild's so they may desire a pure bred bull too. I'm surprised they've imported a fourth (and soon to be fifth) female. I wasn't aware they could accommodate so many breeding females since they've only had a maximum of three breeding females at any one time.
giraffe importation is now a closed circle within Australasia. NZ can only import from Australia, and Australia can only import from NZ.Interested to know more if these are pure-bred Giraffa rothschildi.
It would be no problem exporting some stock from European holders to make the entire AZA / ZAA region go into pure-bred G. rothschildi.
I still remain mistified completely why zoos continue to pursue maintaining and breeding window dressing hybrid stock over really attempting some ex situ conservation breeding
giraffe importation is now a closed circle within Australasia. NZ can only import from Australia, and Australia can only import from NZ.
not sure - late 1990s I think. Its been at least ten to fifteen years at any rate.When did NZ stop overseas imports?
giraffe importation is now a closed circle within Australasia. NZ can only import from Australia, and Australia can only import from NZ.
the zoo organisation here gave up on any sort of conservation importance for giraffes and zebras a long time ago (despite trumpeting how important they are for conservation at every giraffe birth and inter-zoo tranfer). Now they just treat them as generic display animals. I doubt there will ever be any change in that. However I believe there are plans to try and get giraffe imports allowed from elsewhere (e.g. USA) so they can import fresh blood - and any animals imported to NZ or bred here from imported animals, can be then imported into Australia from NZ.Kifaru Bwana said:Effectively that means the death knot for any self-sustaining giraffe population within the region of any conservation importance!
the original Orana animals were a pair from Toronto Zoo (Canada) imported in 1982 - it was the Auckland herd which was descended from Honolulu animals [not Rothschild's].So from memory I seem to recall that the original Rothschildi giraffe were a trio imported from Hawaii to Orana, and that they were siblings. Orana bred there group well. The only other import of Rothschilds was a female to Melbourne that came from Europe, the Netherlands I think. Perth was a successful centre for Rothschilds as well but think that there original animals came from Orana.