Wow, great clip!
It’s shows how much husbandry knowledge of this species has progressed in the 31 years that have since passed. First of all, we can conclude Selatan’s rejection of the cub was due to the stillbirth of Kemiri’s twin reducing the litter to a single cub. This triggered a natural response in Selatan where her milk dried up and her maternal instincts decreased.
Second of all, there was zero chance of reintegrating Kemiri with her mother (I note they say parents, though I don’t believe Shiva cohabited with Selatan and their mother reared 1995 triplets). Kemiri was removed from her mother and upon reaching the age she could be reintroduced, Selatan wouldn’t have recognised her.
The choice to hand-raise a Sumatran tiger cub isn’t something we’d expect to see today in an accredited zoo. Auckland for example elected not to intervene when Zayana’s first litter yielded twins (one stillborn) and she cannibilised the remaining cub. As we know, being handraised in the absence of peers impaired Kemiri’s social skills and she failed to breed with her mate as an adult. She did nonetheless make a friendly and much loved ambassador animal and her impact on the staff and visitors of Adelaide Zoo was never more evident when she passed at the age of 22 years of age, setting the regional longevity record for Sumatran tigers at the time (since surpassed by her cousin Mencari at Hamilton Zoo).
Absolutely. Yeah it's very interesting and unfortunate that if (a) littermate(s) do not survive, how it triggers that response in the mother felids with their milk drying up.
The man interviewing Dr George, Neil Mercer, is a really nice person, and was super impressed by how well researched he was with Taronga's Sumatran tigers' history before the interview and knew about some of the zoos overseas Kemiri's aunts and uncles had gone to like San Diego and Japan (Ueno).
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
There's this video too from 2006
includes
-American alligator
-Squirrel monkeys on island
-wild noisy miner
-Koala in Koala Walkabout
-Agouti in one of old aviaries opposite Serpentaria complex
-(The late great) Tuka the Komodo dragon in his enclosure at front of Serpentaria complex
-Snake-necked turtle behind underwater viewing glass in the outdoor enclosure shared with Freshwater crocodiles (not shown)
-Serpentaria Indoors: tree frogs, sheltopusiks, baby saltwater crocodiles, tuatas, pythons, star tortoises, sailfin lizard, river cooter turtles, Jackson's chamelen, diamondback rattlesnake, mata-mata turtle, Fijian banded iguana, plumed basilisk, green iguanas, (Murray) short-neck turtles (I think), a small desert monitor and desert skink, spiny-tailed skink (someone will now specific species) , frilled-neck lizard, small very showy water monitor, black-headed python, tawny crevice dragon (think, might be other species of small dragon lizard)
-Common tree shrew
-Giraffes and plains zebras
-Chimps' in 'Chimpanzee Park'
-Barbary sheep
-Dromedary camel & scimitar-horned oryx
-Eastern bongo
-Himalayan tahr on 'Tahr Mountain'
-Kwanzaa the south-central black rhino'
-An Egyptian goose wandering the 'African Waterhole' pathway
-A Chilean flamingo in the old exhibit that was Cleo or Katrina the pygmy hippo's formerly
-Western lowland gorillas. According to a commentor, the first one seen is Shabani, and apparently he was living alone at the time in the seperate exhibit that used to have De Brazzas' guenons (I reckon someone will even know which other individuals are seen)
-Saltwater crocodiles in old exhibit (two of them) one peeping out from the water and another basking in the sand in their old very small sandbox enclosure (not sure if one of them was Rin Tin Tin or his predecessor)
-either Bethyl or Cynthia asleep in a rocky alcove at side of their 'Bear Canyon' exhibit (now Mary the sun bear's of course)
-Aldabra giant tortoise with its mouth open then cloed
-View of 'Free Flight Bird Show' ampitheatre and the harbour view
-The
full 'Free Flight Bird Show'
-Andean condor (Bruce or Connie perhaps?) playing with a milkcrate
-Mandarin ducks
-Berani or Denise the Malayan tapir (sadly with one of their eye mask veils covering their eyes, as is known by all of us on the Australasian forums, they lost their sight from the intensity of the Australian sun rays, and as a result went blind, and had to wear eye-veils/masks to protect their eyes from further damage and general comfort against the sunrays)
-Brooke(?) the leopard seal in old seal pool exhibit with two male fur seals or sea lions (the look of their coats makes me think they are either male California sea lions or male Australian sea lions. This was very much the final years of those seal pools existance as pinniped occupied.
-The
full 'Seal Show' at the old Seal Theatre (where ARC is now)
-Fur seal in one of the smallerst (and wire fronted) pool of the old seal pools
-Emu and red kangaroo (male one chilling on the ground, female ones having a look around), and a blue peacock on top of the stones mound, in the old (non walk-through) kangaroo & emu exhibits that are now under the 'Wildlife Retreat' hotel grounds (back in late '90s recall tree kangaroos had one of these exhibits too)
-Goodfellow's tree kangaroo in a wire-fronted exhibit (dont have much memory of this exhibit) sharing with a wallaby species (swamp?), good footage of the tree 'roo
-Platypus swimming in the old Platypus House (nice footage of)
-The old macropod walkthrough (now part of the larger Gulamany Nura walk-through) red kangaroos, agile wallaby, another wallaby (red-necked? or parma?) or pademelon (red-necked?) and emu (the footage of both the female & male agile wallabies found the best thing about the footage, they climb on top of one of the small feeding 'kennels' & the other wallaby species or pademelon are very lovely too
-A blue peacock hovering around one of the upper eateries areas
-Lengthy footage back at Koala Walkabout of the Koalas again brings the video to ab end (Koala Walkabout, Chimp' Park, Gorilla Forest, Wild Asia/Rainforest Trail, Bear Canyon, squirrel monkey island, empty alligator pond + exhibit, b.t.s and tahr-less Tahr Mountain (heritage listed), empty saltwater crocodile exhibitz, and the outer foubdations/facade of the old seal pools (minus the smallest wire fronted one, all traces of that are removed), and (also heritage listed) old giraffe house, are the animal exhibits in this footage that still exist today (some renovated like Chimp' Park since) the other exhibits have either been demolished, or renovated as part of an expansion of the precinct's theme like the old longstanding giraffe exhibit with the zebras too, they still live in that part of the zoo but have about 3 times more exhibit space, and same with the kangaroo, wallaby, pademelon, emu walkthrough area.