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Brookfield zoo welcomes baby giraffe

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New mom Arnieta the giraffe gave birth to a baby boy Nov. 12 at Brookfield Zoo. The newborn weighed 153 pounds at birth, but could eventually grow to be 18 feet tall.

At nine days old, Brookfield Zoo’s newest addition stands taller than many grown men at six feet, two inches. He has big, glassy eyes, a circle-shaped spot among the lopsided, boxy blotches on his neck and little horned tufts on his head that finally fluffed after being flat at birth.

Last Monday, after a 14-month pregnancy and a few hours of labor, a five-year-old zoo giraffe named Arnieta gave birth to a baby boy. The newborn weighed 153 pounds but could eventually grow to be 18 feet tall.

Since his arrival, the calf, his mother and the rest of the zoo’s giraffe herd have been off-limits to visitors so the two could bond. But starting Wednesday, the public was able to see the baby and the rest of his family at the zoo’s indoor Habitat Africa! exhibit.

On Wednesday, members of the media visited the baby, his mother and grandmother, Franny, at their zoo habitat. Following the lead of his less-than-camera-shy mom, it wasn’t long before the baby hoofed his way to the front of its enclosure and began ignoring the limits of personal space by sniffing reporters, licking TV camera lenses and knawing on ropes stretching across the front of its pen like wire fencing.

He doesn’t have a name yet — for now, he’s just baby boy, aside from any nicknames his caregivers have given him — but already, there are big plans for the little guy.

His parents were paired for breeding based on a recommendation from the Association of Zoos and Aquariums, which has a population management group for giraffes. The goal is ensuring there’s a population of giraffes in North America, a species who’s numbers are declining around the globe due to human encroachment, climate change and illegal poaching, said the zoo’s associate animal curator Joan Daniels.

She said there are roughly 400 giraffes in North America that are managed by the zoo association’s population plan. While she said that figure is good, the number of giraffes worldwide is disturbing. The wild giraffe population in Northeast Kenya, she said, is estimated at 5,000 or less. Meanwhile, giraffe numbers decreased by 40 percent in the last 10 years, and there are less than 80,000 left in Africa.

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Amber Krosel wrote on November 21, 2012 4:04 p.m. ...
How cute!

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