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

Posted in , ,

Pal-Cockatoo-Adelaide-2

On October 5 an egg hatched at Adelaide Zoo in South Australia and out popped a Palm Cockatoo chick with a face that only a mother Palm Cockatoo could love! She has since grown into a gorgeous bird! This is the first successful Zoo birth of a Palm Cockatoo in Australia since 1973 and Adelaide Zoo is the only Zoo in Australia to house Palm Cockatoos.  Adelaide Zoo keepers decided to take the egg away from her parents as they had a poor history of incubating their own eggs.  The egg was then placed in an incubator and once hatched the chick was cared for by keepers.  For the first few weeks of her life she needed feeding every hour and a half.  This kept the keepers very busy who in turn took her home over night for those 2am feeds!  Since the Palm Cockatoo are native to warm regions such as northern Queensland, Australia, New Guinea island in Indonesia and Papua New Guinea, the chick had to be kept at a constant temperature of 35C/95F degrees during her early development.

Pal-Cockatoo-Adelaide-7

Pal-Cockatoo-Adelaide-5

Pal-Cockatoo-Adelaide-4

Pal-Cockatoo-Adelaide-3
Photo credits: Adelaide Zoo

http://www.youtube.com/e/zx3Na3h9koo


The eyes began opening at around ten days old and the first signs of feather development were visible under the skin at 18 days. 

At two months of age the chick began to stay full time at Adelaide Zoo and only then required feeding twice a day.  She will still require hand feeding potentially for the next five or six months as wild Palm Cockatoos generally do not leave the nest until they are about four months old and are notoriously slow at weaning.

Between 50 and 70 days old most of her feather growth occurred. The huge primary and secondary flight feathers were still mostly enclosed by the sheaths that protect the feather as they developed. The feathers are very sensitive when they are growing and being bumped or broken can cause a lot of bleeding as each one has a blood supply until it has finished growing.

At 86 days old she took her first flight which was quiet graceful although very short from the weighing scales to a nearby door, where she stayed until a keeper rescued her.

Learning to feed yourself is not that easy if you are a cockatoo. To start with you need to learn to hold things in your foot and manipulate it so that small bits can be broken off and swallowed. It seems that she instinctively knew that the foot is somehow involved in eating.  When she first started perching and was  holding a piece of food in her mouth she would clumsily wave her left foot about, or even just hold it up off the perch. She has progressed past this point, but it is still a challenge to ordinate the whole process.

Adelaide Zoo’s Palm Cockatoo chick’s next big step will be introducing her to her parents so that she gets some much needed socialization to help her learn what it is like to be a real Palm Cocky.

You can help name this young Cockatoo by visiting the Adelaide Zoo's naming competition.

3 responses to “First Palm Cockatoo in (almost) 40 Years!”

  1. Rachel Black Avatar
    Rachel Black

    One of things I am learning from Zooborns is to appreciate creatures that originally seemed ugly to me. Baby hippo, baby rhino – I classified them as “that only a mother could love”. But then I saw the little rhino trotting around, rubbing against its mother’s face, or walking with its mother and keeping very close to her, and gradually I got used to it. Not all baby animals are cute like the ones in the cat family. But every baby is the way it is because that’s the way it is. Now I’m sort of getting used to pygmy hippo babies.
    I printed off a picture from the UK Telegraph newspaper, showing an adult rainbow-lorikeet and its 6-day old baby (the newspaper’s regular Fri. feature, Animal Pictures of the week, Dec. 10, 2010). What a contrast! The adult is gorgeous (in at least six different brilliant colours), but “scruffy” was the nicest thing I could think of to say about the chick. But now I’ve spent a while looking at the picture, I see that the chick has to look this way because that is the way it was designed to look at this age.
    Which brings me to my point. The palm cockatoo chick looked even uglier than the lorikeet chick. But how magnificent it looks as an adult! I know that after I have looked at it for a while, the chick will stop looking ugly to me.
    So thank you, Zooborns, for reducing some of my prejudices!

  2. Lisa Avatar
    Lisa

    Very good point, Rachel. The site increases our appreciation of the not-so-cute.

Leave a Reply

Discover more from ZooBorns

Subscribe now to keep reading and get access to the full archive.

Continue reading