Penticton Herald

Tiny, endangered gorilla baby born in New Orleans

- By JANET McCONNAUGH­EY

NEW ORLEANS — A tiny baby gorilla has been born at the zoo in New Orleans.

Keepers don’t yet know the sex of the critically endangered western lowland gorilla born Friday to 13-year-old Tumani and father Okpara, Audubon Zoo spokeswoma­n Katie Smith said in an email.

“Tumani is demonstrat­ing excellent mothering behaviours and the entire troop is doing exceptiona­lly well,” Smith said. She said keepers first saw the baby during their morning check Friday.

Gorilla babies weigh about 4 pounds (1.8 kilograms) at birth, and photos and video from the zoo show 13year-old mom Tumani cuddling her tiny newborn.

Photos show the baby held in her arms without using her hands.

“All gorilla mothers vary on how they carry their infants. Some even carry football style,” Smith wrote. “In the beginning, she was keeping it close to her mouth ... to clean. She is carrying it differentl­y now. She is supporting it more on its backside and keeping it low so that it can nurse.”

Although the birth was about two weeks after what the zoo had put as the last likely due date, keepers weren’t worried, Smith said, since the dates were based on observed matings.

Once keepers knew Tumani was pregnant, she was trained to carry a baby using a “doll” made from firehose canvas. Native to central Africa, western lowland gorillas were declared critically endangered in 2007 because of habitat loss as well as deaths caused by the Ebola virus and poachers.

The baby is at least the second western lowland gorilla born at a U.S. zoo this year. A female was born Jan. 18 at the Los Angeles Zoo.

It’s Audubon’s first gorilla birth in nearly 25 years. The zoo’s firstborn gorilla is Praline, who is 24 years old and still at the zoo, where the troop also includes a third female, Alafia.

The zoo says its entire primate area will be closed while Tumani and the entire troop bonds with the baby. The zoo says the white patch helps mother gorillas keep track of infants and helps other gorillas recognize it as a baby. The patch will fade when the great ape is 3 to 4 years old, according to the zoo.

 ?? TheAssocia­tedPress ?? Tumani, a 13-year-old critically endangered western lowland gorilla, eats in her enclosure at the Audubon Nature Institute in New Orleans on July 6.
TheAssocia­tedPress Tumani, a 13-year-old critically endangered western lowland gorilla, eats in her enclosure at the Audubon Nature Institute in New Orleans on July 6.

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