Good to know they have previously been successful, somehow missed that news.
They've bred the species three times, only the first didn't survive. The 2nd to be produced was still present on my visit in October - they should now have 4 individuals total.
The pair at the zoo have bred consecutively each year since their arrival in 2021:
-2022 (D.N.S)
-2023
-2024
Good to know they have previously been successful, somehow missed that news.
Apologies for the mislabelling on the 2022 infant, I thought it only lasted a week or two?
The youngster (not the baby) is a female.That’s really fantastic news. Since the import of four pairs into Europe from USA (Chester and Germany) all of the male, bar Chester’s, have died. Hopefully at least one of Chester’s infants are male and can go and join the remaining females in Germany.
I visited the zoo yesterday and spent a considerable amount of time at the sifaka indoor enclosure. All three individuals were clearly on display over a long period of time but unfortunately I couldn't see any baby. I realise a baby would be very small but I was unfortunate not to see it.Some excellent news - a Coquerel’s sifaka had been born at the zoo, the second to be born successfully following the 2023 birth.
Potentially - the post is no longer active on their social media so it makes me think that it is indeed an accidental repost from the zoo.I think that the post about the baby sifaka got taken down off X, and it also had a date of 2023 not 2024, so given nobody has sighted it, is it possible it was an accidental repost of the announcement for last year’s birth?