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

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Just four days ago, Zoo Sauvage of St-Félicien in Quebec welcomed two baby Polar Bear cubs and the Zoo’s den-cam captured the cubs’ birth and first hours. This ultra rare footage of newborn Polar Bear cubs reveals this fact – baby polar bears spend their entire first day screeching.

Note that these grainy low-light videos are not so much cute as they are EXTREMELY noisy. Mother Polar Bears should be issued Aspirin. 

Mama bear cleans her screeching cubs 

The actual birth of the 2nd cub and more screeching 

Mama bear lets the cubs nurse accompanied by abundant screeching

A Canadian first at Zoo sauvage de Saint-Félicien 

Polar bears are born!

Saint-Félicien, Quebec, December 4, 2009—Zoo sauvage de Saint-Félicien recorded a major first in

Canada this week—one that few zoos anywhere in the world have had the chance to experience—when

one of its residents, a female polar bear named Aisaqvaq, gave birth to two cubs on Monday, November

30, 2009. The first cub was born at 7:48 p.m. and the second followed at 10:22 p.m. Captivating video of the births and the mother bear caring for her offspring can be seen at http://www.zoosauvage.org.

The cubs and their mother will be relocated to an arctic habitat in summer of 2010, so come admire them while there’s time! Aisaqvaq gave birth to a cub on December 3, 2008, but then ate it, to the extreme disappointment of Zoo employees (a note to ZooBorn’s readers – we typically run these press releases verbatim and thought it was important to leave in this gruesome but factual detail. Zoo animals are indeed wild animals and often follow their instincts to behaviors that are troubling to humans. That being said, as upsetting as it is, these behaviors are natural for better and worse. Now back to the press release…) This time, however, things are going well. Aisaqvaq is exhibiting good maternal behavior and doing an outstanding job caring for her little ones, who are quick to vocalize if they’re at all uncomfortable.

They are quite vigorous and appear to be in very good condition. A den was designed specifically for birthing and while the first cub was born outside it, Aisaqvaq quickly brought him into its confines. The second cub was born in the den and all three have since remained within it, making it impossible to find out whether the cubs are male or female.

On November 9, Aisaqvaq began to display signs of the impending birth. Her food intake diminished steadily from that date. Because they had studied her behavior in 2008, Zoo staff were able to establish astrategy to attempt to save the new cubs. Zookeepers began round-the-clock observation on November10, scrutinizing her every move with the aid of eight surveillance cameras. After three weeks of restlessanticipation, Zoo personnel looked on in wonderment as the cubs were finally born.

An important contribution toward conserving a species These births are extremely important, and what is even more remarkable is that a female bear in captivity is caring for her offspring herself. Having this best possible scenario become reality has left Zoo personnel overjoyed. The cubs’ birth is a landmark event for the Zoo and also for the species, as polar bears have become symbolic of climate change. The genetic baggage of these cubs, born to parents from the wild, will also have significance for bears in captivity. The occasion is a success for conservation of the species and for the team at Zoo sauvage de Saint-Félicien.

The number of polar bears in captivity worldwide fell from 633 in 1980 to 364 in 2006. In addition, while there were an average 25 litters per year during this period, only nine females provided their young with adequate care. In this respect, Aisaqvaq is therefore to be commended.

7 responses to “The Bear Witch Project”

  1. Lisa Avatar
    Lisa

    Wow, now that I know she ate the cub last year, it makes this even more impressive.
    I never thought anything would be as annoying as a panda cub screeching, but this was pretty bad.
    Also interesting that mother pandas can’t normally handle twins (they let one die) but polar bear mothers do manage to raise more than one at a time. Even with all the yelling.

  2. V.C. Wald Avatar

    I would screech like that if my mother was the size of a polar bear and sat on me on my first day outside the womb too
    My kitten found the screeches absolutely fascinating!

  3. leslie Avatar

    Okay, yeah, that’s pretty annoying. But (with the sound off) it is so amazing to watch her deal with her young’uns! And that third video was more like whimpering compared to the first two. 😉

  4. Diana B Avatar
    Diana B

    V.C., my Cocker Spaniel found the screeching quite distressing, but she’s had puppies and so, I suppose, knows a thing or two about demanding infants. Still, I think I’d sit on both of them after about ten minutes of that infernal racket! Glad their mother’s cooler head prevailed, however, and it’ll be fun to watch her raise these two.

  5. Anne Avatar

    I would screech too if my mother was a polar bear and picked me up in her mouth!
    Add me to the list of people who’s pets were disturbed by the screeching, my (male) Papillon is still watching my computer screen in fascination.

  6. Ed Shaw Avatar
    Ed Shaw

    It is too bad that we must watch a zoo video to see the species propagate, since our activities continually reduce the number of the animals in the wild. Look hard at these videos, folks, because soon zoos will be the only place where these births will happen.

  7. Shakatany Avatar

    It’s a good thing that Polar bears are on top of the food chain as all that screeching would alert every predator in the neighborhood.
    It’s astonishing that anything that tiny can be cared for by such a large animal and then grow that large too.

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