The Newest, Cutest Baby Animals from the World's Zoos & Aquariums

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Perth Zoo is calling on the community to take action in a campaign to mandate the labelling of palm oil on all food products. The call-to-action came today as a four-week-old critically endangered Sumatran Orangutan, made her debut. The as-yet-unnamed female orangutan was born at 10:40am on 20
October to 39-year-old mother, Puteri. The infant weighed just under 2
kg at birth.

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Exotics Curator Leif Cocks gets a first-hand introduction to the baby…

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Photos: Perth Zoo/Ross Swanborough

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For more pics and info, read on after the jump…


 

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The mother and her newborn were given some private time together before being introduced to the public.

Perth Zoo Exotics Curator Leif Cocks said Puteri and the infant are doing extremely well.

“Puteri adores the baby, cradling and feeding her when she is hungry or appears to need reassurance,” Mr Cocks said.

“The baby is now hanging onto Puteri without assistance and is strong and alert.”

Perth Zoo is a world leader in breeding Sumatran Orangutans and has
bred 27 Sumatran Orangutans since 1970. Mother Puteri was the first of
the 27 orangutans born at the Zoo.

Perth Zoo Chief Executive Officer Susan Hunt said the birth of the
female orangutan is a cause for celebration but the community needs to
be aware of the serious threat facing orangutans in the wild.

One of the greatest threats to their survival is habitat destruction
resulting from the increase in demand for palm oil.  Palm oil is found
in an estimated four out of 10 supermarket products and is often simply
labelled as vegetable oil.

The cultivation of oil palms (the tree which produces palm oil) has
caused the destruction of thousands of hectares of rainforest habitat
in Malaysia and Indonesia and as a result the slaughter of hundreds of
orangutans and the poaching of infants for the pet trade.

“The
Don’t Palm Us Off campaign is about us being aware of the impact of our
consumption and about making a difference to the lives of orangutans,
and the preservation of rainforest habitats and other threatened
animals,” Ms Hunt said.

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“Signatures are being collected across Australia to be used in a
submission to Food Standards Australia and New Zealand (FSANZ) which
has the power to make the labelling of palm oil mandatory.

“By collecting signatures we are demonstrating that the community
wants the choice of whether they purchase products that contain palm
oil.

“The campaign aims to raise public awareness of the serious threats
to orangutans and other wildlife through our consumption of foodstuffs
and other goods.

“It also calls for food producers to introduce controls to ensure that their products come from sustainable sources.”

A desired outcome is that food companies will only source palm oil
from sustainable producers and as a consequence the cycle of forest
clearing, animal deaths and unsustainable palm oil production will
cease.

The aim is that no further forests will be cut down for plantations,
animals will be protected and workers will be given proper working
conditions and a living wage in a more sustainable industry.

“Presently 6000 orangutans are dying every year. It is important
that we are aware of the effect that our consumer choices are having on
animals in the wild like the cousins of our newborn orangutan,” Ms Hunt
said.

People can show their support for the campaign by registering their details on Perth Zoo’s website at www.perthzoo.wa.gov.au/palmoil
or by filling in a Don’t Palm Us Off postcard when they visit the Zoo.
Perth Zoo is a partner with Zoos Victoria in the Don’t Palm Us Off
campaign.

Today’s public debut of the infant orangutan also coincides with the
three-year anniversary since the release of female orangutan, Temara,
into a protected area in the Bukit Tigapuluh National ecosystem in
Sumatra, Indonesia.

Temara is a full sister to the new infant and was the first zoo-born orangutan ever to be released into the wild.

She is part of an international partnership between the Indonesian
Government, the Frankfurt Zoological Society, Australian Orangutan
Project and Perth Zoo to establish a new population of Sumatran
Orangutans in the wild.

Except for Temara, all orangutans in the program are ex-pet trade or orphaned orangutans.

A naming competition for the baby orangutan is being run through The West online which starts tomorrow and closes on 4 December.

Watch a video of Puteri and her infant with Perth Zoo Exotics Curator Leif Cocks and Head Orangutan Keeper Kylie Bullo. (requires Windows Media Player, 2.67mb)

Media contact: Daniel Scarparolo (08) 9474 0383 or 0438 950 643

Background Information

  • The infant will start eating solids, such as tropical fruit, at
    about five months of age but will continue to feed from her mother for
    the next five to six years.
  • The father of the infant is 34-year-old Hsing Hsing, who has been
    at Perth Zoo since 1983. He has fathered three other offspring at the
    Zoo.
  • The infant celebrates the same birthday as the youngest male at the Zoo, Nyaru, who was born in 2007.
  • The Zoo’s colony currently comprises nine females and four males. 
  • Perth Zoo is part of an Australasian captive breeding program for the critically endangered Sumatran Orangutan.
  • Sumatran Orangutans are the slowest reproducing species in the
    world. Adult females only give birth to an infant every eight or nine
    years. The gestation period of orangutans is 260 days (or 8.5 months) –
    almost identical to that of humans. The oestrous cycle of orangutans is
    30 days – once again, almost identical to humans. 
  • Females usually have their first offspring between 12 and 16 years of age.
  • One of our closest biological relatives, orangutans have around 97%
    human genetic make-up and have an intelligence level equivalent to that
    of a five or six-year-old child.
  • Orangutan means person of the forest in Indonesian.

8 responses to “Perth’s Newest Primate: “Don’t Palm Us Off!””

  1. Marla Taviano Avatar

    Not positive, tough call, but I think orangutan babies might be my favorite babies of all.

  2. Smilla Avatar
    Smilla

    Thank you for this post. Orangutans mothers and babies are so tender and strong and affectionate. I have signed the petition and hope others do too.

  3. recaro baby seat Avatar

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  4. fumbling around Avatar
    fumbling around

    I think the next 5 years are going to be critical for Bornean and Sumatran Orangutan numbers in the wild. Their homes are being wiped out for these palm plantations.
    I love to look at these photos of mothers with their babies, they are beautiful and seem to be extremely gentle and affectionate. I don’t even want to think about these guys possibly becoming extinct, that would be very sad. I will sign the petition too.

  5. Muffy Avatar
    Muffy

    A bath & body products company in Canada (that I frequently use) is also supporting the ban on palm oil, and has removed it from all their products. A wise choice.
    Isn’t this little red-head just cute as a doll! She’s cutes than some of my homo sapiens cousins were at that age.

  6. Joel Avatar
    Joel

    Choosing between palm oil or baby orangutans is probably the easiest choice I’ve ever had do make.

  7. URang Avatar
    URang

    Wow. I watched Jeff Corwin’s documentary last night and it was the first I’d heard of the palm oil. Unbelieveable. Now I’m so totally anti-palm oil.

  8. Yannu56 Avatar

    Nice. Special care has been taken at the Perth zoo to ensure the animals have as much space and natural habitat that a city zoo can offer. It is really a nice place to stroll and enjoy the flora and fauna with friends and family. Of course, most animals in the pens that you can not enter for safety reasons, but there are some areas where you can walk freely amongst wildlife. It is a truly magical feeling to someone who is not accustomed to seeing these wonderful creatures.
    http://www.travelaustralia360.com/perth-zoo.html

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