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Baby Takin is king of the hill at San Diego Zoo

A two-week-old Sichuan Takin climbs to the highest point in his exhibit on Wednesday. The kid, who was born on Dec. 28, 2010, was named Wûshi, which means 50 in Mandarin, because he is the 50th Takin to call the San Diego Zoo home. The first Sichuan Takin born outside of China was born at the San Diego Zoo in 1989. When Wûshi is not climbing rocks and tree stumps, he can be found head butting just about anything in his enclosure–including his grandmother, Bea.

Baby Takin San Diego Zoo giving a side smile

Baby Takin up close and personal at San Diego ZooPhoto credits: San Diego Zoo

Read and see more below the fold…

Baby Takin San Diego Zoo giving a side smile

Over the next few weeks, Wûshi’s horns will start to come through. His coat will also get lighter in color, longer and shaggier. Young takins are much darker than adults to hide them from predators in the forest.Takins, which are considered an endangered species by the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN), live in the bamboo forests of China and the eastern Himalayan Mountains of Asia. They are skilled climbers and migrate to forage for food. While Takin might look like muskox they are actually more closely related to sheep,  The main cause of their declining numbers in the wild is loss of habitat due to farming, logging and mining operations. China has given the takin full protection under its laws, which is the same protection given to giant pandas.  

Baby Takin is king of the a smaller hill at San Diego ZooCheck out Wûshi's hooves in the picture above!

10 responses to “Baby Takin Is King of the Hill at San Diego Zoo”

  1. B13 Avatar
    B13

    Muskox are part of the goat-antelope family too….
    😉

  2. Andrew Bleiman Avatar

    B13 – You are quite correct. We have adjusted the post accordingly. Thanks

  3. Anna Avatar
    Anna

    He looks so cuddly!

  4. Rachel Black Avatar
    Rachel Black

    I wonder whether takins’ wool is soft enough to knit with? If so, that would protect them very well – probably they would be kept in flocks raised by sheepfarmers for the wool.

  5. ym Avatar
    ym

    I’ll bet a sweater or vest made of takin cool would fetch a good price, too.

  6. White Jenna Avatar
    White Jenna

    Rachel, takin are incredibly dangerous. There’s no way they could be herded like livestock.

  7. LLMM Avatar
    LLMM

    we were there on January 11th, and he got fiesty on the rocks, jumped into the air, and fell, KA-THUMP right on his nose. He laid there a few seconds, then sprang back to all four hoofs, and trotted around as if to say, “yeah, I meant to do that!” I didn’t realize he wasn’t quite 2 weeks old at the time. He was so cute!

  8. ady Avatar
    ady

    isaw a young takin in antwerp zoo last year its parents were wery protective of it not seen this species in any other european zoo

  9. theangelJean Avatar

    White Jenna: Aww, but they were hand-feeding the adult ones in the photo! But I guess we’d all rather they were running around wild.
    I wondered the other day what sheep looked and acted like before they were domesticated, and how they survived. This gives some idea…

  10. Someone Avatar
    Someone

    The video and the text says his name is different, with the tone on the ‘u’ and the tone is missing on the ‘i’. This doesn’t make a difference in English, but in Mandarin this can mean all the difference 🙂
    That said, I can’t find fall-rise accent from a quick google search for Pinyin alphabet.

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