South Lakes Wild Animal Park South lakes 2014 news

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Out of interest, how was it discovered/why was it suggested that there are no West African giraffes in captivity?

The taxonomic status of all known "peralta" giraffes was reassessed, with the result that they were all definitively demonstrated by the researchers Alexandre Hassanin, Anne Ropiquet, Anne-Laure Gourmand, Bertrand Chardonnet and Jacques Rigoulet to belong to the Kordofan subspecies (G.c.antiquorum) in the 2007 paper "Mitochondrial DNA variability in Giraffa camelopardalis: consequences for taxonomy, phylogeography and conservation of giraffes in West and central Africa" - unfortunately the article linked is paywalled, but the abstract is as follows:

The giraffe (Giraffa camelopardalis) still survives in four countries of West and central Africa. The populations of Niger and Cameroon are generally assigned to the subspecies peralta, but those of Chad and the Central African Republic are taxonomically problematic, as they are referred to as either peralta, or antiquorum, or congoensis. In this study, a mitochondrial fragment of 1765 nucleotide sites, covering the complete cytochrome b gene, three transfer RNAs and a large part of the control region, was sequenced to assess the relationships between several populations of giraffe. The phylogenetic analyses performed on the 12 identified haplotypes indicate that northern giraffes constitute a natural group, distinct from that of southern giraffes. Surprisingly, the giraffes of Niger are found to be more closely related to the giraffes of East Africa (subspecies rothschildi and reticulata) than to those of central Africa. We conclude therefore that the subspecies peralta contains only the Niger giraffes, whereas the subspecies antiquorum includes all populations living in Cameroon, Chad, the Central African Republic, and southwestern Sudan. We suggest that the ancestor of the Nigerian giraffe dispersed from East to North Africa during the Quaternary period and thereafter migrated to its current Sahelian distribution in West Africa, in response to the development of the Sahara desert. This hypothesis implies that Lake Mega-Chad acted as a strong geographical barrier during the Holocene, preventing any contact between the subspecies peralta and antiquorum. Our study has direct implications for conservation management, as we show that no subspecies peralta is represented in any European zoos, only in Niger, with a small population of less than 200 individuals.
 
Out of interest, how was it discovered/why was it suggested that there are no West African giraffes in captivity?

It is explained here.

[ame=http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/West_African_giraffe]West African giraffe - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia[/ame]
 
So if I understand correctly, they know no giraffes were taken into captivity from the region where West Africans are found? I would assume if any were to have been taken from there in the past that any purity through the generations would now be non existent anyway.
 
So if I understand correctly, they know no giraffes were taken into captivity from the region where West Africans are found? I would assume if any were to have been taken from there in the past that any purity through the generations would now be non existent anyway.

That, and the fact genetic research showed the region where West Africans are found is more limited in size than previously thought.

It is worth noting that Doue la Fontaine and Paris Vincennes - the two collections who supplied the SLWAP giraffes in question - make it clear they hold Kordofan giraffes.
 
I know, just pointing that out for anyone who didn't see it, or believes that Gill has all pure of the same species.

~Thylo:cool:

From memory both Tibor and Bo both have a part Baringo bloodline in them, with Tibor marked as an unknown meaning his bloodline is suspect and with Bot for sure a hybrid.
 
Apparently people are now allowed inside the Giraffe house to see Belle. Visitors are asked to enter quietly and no flash photography. Was going to try to go early next week, but might see if I can sneak a visit early on Friday morning, before the masses arrive....
 
..and there is now a video on the parks Facebook of the calf going outside for the first time this afternoon
 
That's quite a lot to have happened to a calf who's barely 48 hours old. You'd think a modern zoo would know to wait a little bit longer but, at the same time, you'd think a modern zoo would know better than to separate the calf from its mother the moment its standing so little kids can wrestle and chase it.

~Thylo:cool:
 
That's quite a lot to have happened to a calf who's barely 48 hours old. You'd think a modern zoo would know to wait a little bit longer but, at the same time, you'd think a modern zoo would know better than to separate the calf from its mother the moment its standing so little kids can wrestle and chase it.

~Thylo:cool:

This isn't a modern zoo though, this is a David Gill modern zoo. ;)
 
Today's Daily telegraph newspaper has a photo of the mother and calf with the following write up and I quote
" One of the rarest animals on the planet was born at Cumbria's South Lakes Wild Animal Park zoo yesterday The female is the first West African giraffe born in the UK one of a handful of the species in captivity. there are thought to be no more than 450 in their native habitat" unquote
 
I feel sorry for the little calf but unfortunately it seems it is a prime example of someone cashing in on a baby animal ...
Should have been in the giraffe house quietly and calmly with Mum not outside in front of a large crowd :confused: the keepers did right to limit numbers etc inside the giraffe house.

A hell of a lot for a 48 hour calf to deal with, seperated from mum so that kids can swamp it with unwanted attention, then released outside into an unfamiliar place to a crowd of noisy children and families.

I can't get to the zoo for another week or so as my OH is away at uni so waiting for him to come back for the weekend to take me, but i am hoping by then the masses will have gone and things should be back to normal.
 
Visited today primarily to see Belle and she was really struggling to walk, she was dragging her left back leg along and wasn't putting weight on it. One of the keepers was worried but others just kept stating it was nothing to worry about, one kicked hay to scare her into moving but she was clearly having problems. David Gill had a look and said that he thinks it is a sprain or muscle damage but surely it is worth the vet looking incase she trips and causes more injury to herself? Apparently one of the bigger ones had knocked into her while she was suckling. Mum did not seem to be as attentive as i would have expected and Belle was on her own majority of the day until shut in a seperate section with Mum and then i witnessed her suckling which is a good sign at least.

There were only two saddleback tamarins that i could see although more may have been asleep in their nest box type thing.
 
So more news on the giraffe and not good at that from there Facebook page:

A little bit of sad news... Belle our beautiful female West African Giraffe calf had an accident yesterday when her Aunt who is due to have a calf very soon brushed past her and the simple slow easy movement dislocated Belles left back leg. Belle is having the best treatment and we are watching the situation . She can still walk with a limp and we are hoping for a recovery.
 
Knew it definitely wasn't right at all, glad they obviously got the vet to see her because yesterday all three people who seen to it said muscle damage to be left only one keeper was pushing for the vet to see her. She was really struggling. I hope she can fully recover but does anyone know how likely a full recovery is for a baby giraffe with a dislocated leg?
 
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