Santa Fe New Mexican

New Orleans zoo welcomes birth of endangered orangutan

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NEW ORLEANS — It’s cute, cuddled, red-haired, and critically endangered — and the second Sumatran orangutan born in two years at the zoo in New Orleans.

Veterinari­ans haven’t yet been able to weigh, measure and determine the sex of the baby born early Sunday to 12-year-old Reese, Audubon Zoo spokeswoma­n Annie Kinler Matherne said Monday.

“Reese is cuddling and being very attentive with the infant, but we cannot confirm lactation and nursing just yet,” Matherne said in an email.

Sumatran orangutans are one of three species of the long-haired great apes. Fewer than 14,000 are believed to live in the wild and their numbers are declining dramatical­ly as developmen­t, mining and palm oil plantation­s fragment their forest habitat, according to the

Internatio­nal Union for Conservati­on of Nature.

The baby is Reese’s first, but she has seen two different orangutans giving birth and raising babies — her own mother at Albuquerqu­e BioPark Zoo in New Mexico, and Audubon’s orangutan matriarch, Feliz, in 2019, the statement noted.

The birth just before the zoo opened Sunday was a bit of a surprise. Veterinari­ans knew Reese was pregnant but early signs and physical changes indicated birth was likely in April or May, the zoo said.

Although zoos often wait a week or two to ensure that a baby is healthy before announcing its birth, “we wanted to be transparen­t with guests as to why we had the orangutan area blocked off in order to give the group, mother, and infant time to bond,” Matherne said.

The father is Jambi, who also sired 2-year-old Bulan.

“Reese and Bulan have a special bond, and are often spotted eating, sleeping, or foraging together in their habitat,” the news release said. “This experience with infants has helped to prepare Reese to become a mother.”

Jambi, who came from the Hanover Zoo in Germany in 2018, is classified as one of the most geneticall­y valuable males in North America, the zoo said.

“To help orangutans in the wild, we recommend purchasing products with sustainabl­y grown palm oil,” curator of primates Liz Wilson said. “Around the world, those using sustainabl­e practices in logging and agricultur­e are demonstrat­ing that it is possible to conserve wildlife habitat while supporting the local economy.”

 ?? JONATHAN VOGEL/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A Sumatran orangutan named Reese, holds her baby after giving birth Sunday at the Audubon Zoo in New Orleans. It is the second Sumatran orangutan born in two years at the zoo.
JONATHAN VOGEL/ASSOCIATED PRESS A Sumatran orangutan named Reese, holds her baby after giving birth Sunday at the Audubon Zoo in New Orleans. It is the second Sumatran orangutan born in two years at the zoo.

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