This happens every few weeks or so - I figured there should be a general thread for all of this stuff. If people happen to catch good photos of the babies this might be a good place for at as well.
Over on the Disney Parks Blog, they just posted an article about a baby Okapi being born over at the Animal Kingdom Lodge. For those familiar with the resort, Okapis and Red River Hogs are on a separate Savannah over at Kidani Village. They are not on the shared Savannah between Kidani and Jambo House.
Over on the Disney Parks Blog, they just posted an article about a baby Okapi being born over at the Animal Kingdom Lodge. For those familiar with the resort, Okapis and Red River Hogs are on a separate Savannah over at Kidani Village. They are not on the shared Savannah between Kidani and Jambo House.
Disney’s Animal Kingdom Lodge guests may get a glimpse of a rare and unusual baby animal in a month or so when our new okapi calf goes out on the resort’s Pembe savanna. The female calf, born Oct. 1, is backstage bonding with her mom in this great photo taken by Gene Duncan. Our animal care managers report that mom and baby are doing very well.
The Pembe savanna in Kidani Village presents an exceptional opportunity for guests to see okapi in a large, mixed-species savanna habitat right outside the guests’ hotel rooms throughout the day and into the evening.
The okapi is considered rare and is classified as near threatened. The main threat is habitat loss due to logging and human settlement as well as hunting for the bush meat and skin trade.
Okapi fun facts:
•There are fewer than one hundred okapi in North American zoological facilities.
•The okapi with its white and black striped legs is often thought to be related to the zebra but actually is the only living relative of the giraffe. The stripes work as camouflage when hiding in the partial sunlight that filters through the forest canopy.
•Okapi are typically solitary animals, living alone or in mother-offspring pairs. They are extremely wary and secretive, making okapi very difficult to observe in the lowland rainforest of central Africa where they make their home.
•The okapi’s gestation period is about 14 months, with the calf typically weighing between 50 and 60 pounds at birth.
•Adult okapi can reach weights of 550-720 pounds with females typically being larger than males. They can live over 30 years in zoological facilities.
•Normally silent, female okapi vocalize with a soft “chuff” during courtship and when calling to their calves. There are infrasonic qualities to their call, which are below the frequency that the human ear can pick up.