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Australia welcomes its first new-born elephant
Saturday, 4 Jul, 2009 12:39 pm
SYDNEY : Australia Saturday welcomed the first elephant ever born in the country with the arrival of a 100-kilogram (220.4-pound) male calf at a Sydney zoo, keepers said.

The calf, yet to be named, was born at the harbourside Taronga Zoo just after 3am (1700 GMT) to a 12-year-old Asian elephant named Thong Dee, the zoo's director Guy Cooper said.

"(Staff) were with her throughout the night and have been sleeping at the barn to support Thong Dee the instant she went into labour," Cooper said.

"She was quite magnificent and her success is a tribute to the incredibly hard work our elephant keepers have done to support our elephants as a true family unit," he added.

Thong Dee, formerly a Bangkok street elephant, was surprised by the birth, and needed to be calmed before she could be introduced to her son, said Cooper, adding that the calf was conceived naturally with the bull Gung under the zoo's breeding programme.

She greeted her baby by touching his trunk and he soon tried to suckle, which Cooper said was a good sign.

"The early signs are good and we will monitor mother and calf very closely, providing every possible support," he said.

As few as 33,000 endangered Asian elephants are thought to remain in Asia, and only half of all 22-month pregnancies in the wild succeed.

The zoo's Asian elephant matriarch, 16-year-old Porntip, is due to give birth early next year to her first calf conceived by artifical insemination, with sperm from Melbourne Zoo's bull Bong Su.



Copyright AFP (Agence France-Presse), 2009




   
   
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