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Showing posts with label FLORIDA. Show all posts
Showing posts with label FLORIDA. Show all posts

Monday, February 20, 2012

NEWS - PUBLIC SUBMITS NAME SUGGESTIONS FOR ZOOS NEWEST ADDITION

Public submits name suggestions for zoo's newest addition 


 

GULF BREEZE — The number of name suggestions coming in for the newborn gorilla is too high to count, says Gulf Breeze Zoo director Kayte Wanko.
“I think we’ve gotten about a million and a half,” she joked. “We’ve decided to take 20 or 30 of the most popular names and then let people vote from there.”
Suggestions topping the chart are Quinn, after zoo founder Pat Quinn; Monkeydoodle; Caesar, from “Planet of the Apes”; or naming the 7.4-pound boy after the doctors who delivered him almost one month ago — Griffin or Dyson.


“Some of the names we’ve gotten I can’t even pronounce,” Wanko said. “We’ve also gotten entries that are clearly named after the person, like Steve or Bradley; and then we’ve gotten girl names, which we’ve had to scrap because we can’t have a huge male gorilla with a girl name.”
Voting for the name will begin Feb. 29 and the gorilla will have a name by mid-March.
Five-year-old Andrew Vieira ran up to the exhibit and asked a zoo employee the sex of the baby.
“I knew it,” he shouted after learning the gorilla is a boy. “I guessed it was a boy before we left the house.”
Andrew’s family soon joined him in staring through the glass at the gorilla, lying on the stomach of a resting zoo worker.
“If I could name him, I’d name him Spiderman,” Andrew said.
The baby gorilla is expected to reach anywhere from 300 to 500 pounds when he becomes an adult, which will be in 12 to 13 years. For now, the zoo is taking round-the-clock care of the primate.
“He’s doing great,” Wanko said. “He’s eating really well, he’s moving on his own — well, he’s scooting on his own.”
Wanko said the gorilla’s upper arm strength has continued to grow, which is demonstrated anytime the zoo worker inside the nursery moves.
“He clings onto our legs, our shirts. He doesn’t let go,” Wanko said.
Inside the nursery, officials working with the small gorilla work to exhibit few human traits.
“We always walk on our knees, we never use utensils in there, and we don’t talk. We just make gorilla noises,” Wanko said. “When he’s about five months, we’ll put him back with the other gorillas.”
Wanko said the baby’s mother, Rwanda, does not recognize the baby as her own. She was raised in a zoo, so her natural instincts for mothering are lacking.
“We are trying to act just like a mother gorilla would whenever we interact with him,” she said. “We do stay the night in the nursery, which now means a feeding every three hours on a good night.”

Thursday, February 2, 2012

NEWS - FLORIDA ZOO ASKS FOR HELP NAMING BABY GORILLA

Gulf Breeze Zoo asks for help naming baby gorilla

 The name that baby gorilla contest is on.

Zuri, Curious George and just plain Cute are among the dozens of names flowing into the The Breeze Zoo after zoo officials sent out a call to help name their new resident, a baby Western lowland gorilla.
The 5-pound bouncing baby boy was born on Jan. 23 and is the son of Rwanda, the 25-year-old mother, and Babuka, a 19-year-old male.
Kayte Wanko, zoo director, said name submissions are being accepted through Feb. 29. Zoo staff will vote and announce the name by March 15.
"He is the first baby gorilla to be born at the zoo," Wanko said. "We're raising him as close to gorilla as we can. We crawl around with him, sleep on the floor with him. A gorilla needs to be on its mother 24 hours a day."
Rwanda began to show signs of labor Sunday night. Twelve hours later, a cesarean section was performed.
The mother was unable to produce milk and displayed behavior that was potentially threatening to her offspring, which is not unusual for first-time and hand-reared mothers of all species. As a result, zoo staff are rotating mommy gorilla duties.
The work is paying off. The baby is robust and thriving. And, if all goes well, the wide-eyed, fuzzy-headed baby may be in his nursery, behind glass, where the public may see him on Saturday. Early afternoons will likely be the best viewing time, Wanko said.

NEWS - GORILLA BORN AT FLORIDA PANHANDLE ZOO

posted on Thursday, 02.02.12

Gorilla born at Florida Panhandle zoo

 

The Associated Press

A zoo in the Florida Panhandle wants some helping naming a new gorilla.
The 5-pound male Western lowland gorilla was born Jan. 23 at the Gulf Breeze Zoo. The mother is a 25-year-old named Rwanda.
It's the first gorilla birth at the zoo in Gulf Breeze. Zoo director Kayte Wanko says the baby gorilla was delivered by a cesarean section.
Wanko says zoo staff members are caring for the baby gorilla for now because its mother could not produce milk and displayed behaviors that may be harmful to her offspring.
Wanko tells the Pensacola News Journal ( http://on.pnj.com/yahHeB) that names can be submitted by mail or in the gift shop through Feb. 29. After that, zoo staff will vote on a name and announce the winner by March 15.

Read more here: http://www.miamiherald.com/2012/02/02/2620549/gorilla-born-at-florida-panhandle.html#storylink=cpy