The Mercury News

Baby hippo is an educationa­l force

- By Dan Sewell

CINCINNATI » Just call her Professor Fiona.

The Cincinnati Zoo’s famous premature baby hippo does more than delight social media fans and help sell a wide range of merchandis­e. She’s also an educationa­l and literary force, heroine of a halfdozen books so far and a popular subject for library and classroom activities.

The latest book is “Saving Fiona,” (Houghton Mifflin Harcourt) written by the zoo’s director, Thane Maynard.

“She has taught us a lot,” Maynard said. It’s believed Fiona is the smallest hippo to survive. Born nearly two months early, she was 29 pounds, a third the size of a typical full-term Nile hippo and unable to stand or nurse.

A zoo staffer handmilked her mother Bibi, and Smithsonia­n’s National Zoo in Washington helped develop a special formula. Nurses from Cincinnati Children’s Hospital were enlisted to put in a hippo IV.

“We were a nervous wreck every day,” Maynard said of Fiona’s first six months after her birth in January 2017.

His book is aimed at young readers, telling Fiona’s against-the-odds story while loading in facts about hippos, such as that they can outrun humans and are herbivores that can be dangerous because of their size of up to 5,000 pounds.

“Part of the zoo’s mission is public education,” Maynard said. “(The book) is reaching kids and families with a message of hope ... never giving up.”

The combined Fiona library of books by various authors and illustrato­rs has sold tens of thousands.

Educators say students are attracted to lessons themed around animals.

Fiona has been on the cover of three Scholastic Classroom Magazines that reached millions of students with stories accompanie­d by reading exercises or math formulas such as finding how many bathtubs the water in her zoo would fill.

“Everybody just falls in love with her,” said Stephanie Smith, editorial director for Scholastic News grades 3-6. “Kids will just gobble it up. It makes teaching easy.”

 ?? JOHN MINCHILLO — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Fiona, a baby Nile Hippopotam­us, sleeps beside a copy of “Saving Fiona,” at the Cincinnati Zoo & Botanical Garden.
JOHN MINCHILLO — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Fiona, a baby Nile Hippopotam­us, sleeps beside a copy of “Saving Fiona,” at the Cincinnati Zoo & Botanical Garden.

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