Onychorhynchus coronatus
Well-Known Member
Yes, totally agree. From what I've seen from mexican zoos, I've indeed seen they like naming their animals with Aztec/mayan names, and, besides liking the cultural aspects, I honestly really like how these words sound (particularly apreciate the pronunciation of many L's and X's).
Yeah, BH is actually alternating the names of the gorillas with native brazilian indigenous names (such as "Ayo" and "Sawidi", the youngest and oldest males, respectively) and the african ones ("Jahari" and "Anaya", the second oldest male and the youngest female, respectively). The only one that doesn't have an ethnic name nowadays is the silverback "Leon". The two adult females came from Howletts with names "Imbi" and "Lou Lou". I also think that naming them with this cultural aspects is way better than naming them those shallow names animals used to be named in zoos in the past... As you said, no difference for the animal itself, but for the whole scenery it's involved...
I personally think its great when zoos do that with naming an animal according to the culture of the geographic location where its from, I think it is so much more creative than something like "Johnny" or "Princess".
It is impressive that they are doing this, but I don't know if I like the idea of BH naming the gorillas with indigenous Brazilian names.
Don't you think it might be far better to name them with Afro-Brazilian names from Afro Brazilian folklore or Candomblé for example given that the gorilla is an African species and that African culture is really sort of one of the main cultural influences on this country?
Yes, I think the Aspinall parks do name their gorillas with African names from African cultures though "Lou Lou" sounds a bit more Western / Anglo to me, lol.
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