Both Oscar and Puluh are now grandparents yes - so that's 3 generations - that's great stuff from Chester.
Oscar - great grand father to Moira. Puluh, Subis - grandparents.
Both Oscar and Puluh are now grandparents yes - so that's 3 generations - that's great stuff from Chester.
How does this compare to Orangs held by other collections do you know?
I think Perth where Puluh's mother lives have had similar success with Sumatrans. They have also returned two of their Sumatran orangs to Sumatra, one a few years ago and one very recently.
If you archive Z magazine (of course you do) there's a really nice thing about the orangs from early last year.
to my shame mine are scattered about the house in a very unachived fashion!!
Thanks for all of the info guys - now I need you to let me into the secret of how to identify them when I see them.
Obviously the Adult males are easy as they tend to look like walking carpets!!
Emma has a more 'bluey' face - is that right?
Perth bred 19 Sumatran-Orang-Utans, 14 achieved adulthood. The most successful breeder in the world is Dresden. They bred 29 Orang-Utan, 20 achieved adulthood.
Puluh - Born in Perth 23 Sep 1987
Transferred to Chester 15 Dec 1996
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I think Chester have probably bred(successfully) the most Sumatrans in the UK with Jersey(okay- not UK!) in 2nd place. But they are still way behind a lot of other continental Zoo groups of Sumatran orangs which have very impressive breeding records-Dresden,Frankfurt, Berlin, Heidleberg, Zurich to name a few(+ Perth in Australia).
Isn't it mainly down to how many they keep? The two females are going as fast as they can - for females raising their own babies. Utara was quite young when Indah was born.