excellent news for the zoo, i was keeping an eye out for the official announcement, which caught me a bit off guard, but the coverage has been amazing.
however, whilst the media hinted at the endangered wild status of the species, little mention was made of the near extinction of this species regionally.
i would still consider the future of this species prearious at best. is it assumed or has Timmy really been sent packing? if this is the case, i am left shaking my head. taronga could be considered to have space for up to 4 adult hippos (at least two animals in the old tapir exhibit, two in the african waterhole and surely a fifth animal could be stored somewhere else, if not melbourne or adelaide zoos?), i feel Taronga should have retained the male and secured at least a second calf from the pairing before returning him. At 23 years of age he is not a young sire, and establishing his genes is essential for the health of the program. Similarly, until Cairns arranges some form of exchange things dont look hopeful. at best, the future of this program is based on just four potential founders. securing more calves from all four of these animals should be considered a PRIORITY! the loss of just one of these founders and/or either of the calves would reduce the programs baseline by a quarter.
the calf has not had the best start to life, im guessing everyone hopes she makes it. i dont think anyone can breath a sigh of relief just yet. she needs to breed herself yet, hopefully with the young QLD male.
until this happens, this program remains, along with the program for dhole, francois langur, indian rhino and bongo on very shaky ground. with quarantine as it is, about the only thing going for this species is that it is relatively long-lived. but if we are to see more pygmy hippo in zoos for the next few decades we need to get at least two or three calves from the current pairings in order to create un-related pairings for the respective holders, who could produce calves themselves without effectively being inbred!