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

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The Cincinnati Zoo recently announced the hatching of a Raggiana Bird-of-paradise chick. This is the Zoo’s third chick, and they are one of only four facilities in the U.S. to breed and raise the species in the last ten years. Only eleven AZA zoos house this species.

According to the Cincinnati Zoo, the parents have a habit of breaking their eggs. In an effort to do what is best for the survival of the chick, keepers opted for “ghost rearing”. “Ghost rearing” involves a procedure of feeding the chick from behind a screen, to disguise where the food is coming from, and prevent the chick from imprinting with humans. The Zoo plans to re-introduce the chick to its parents, once it is weaned.

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4_IMG_3316Photo Credits: Kathy Newton (Images 1,7) / Cincinnati Zoo (Images 2-6,8)

The Raggiana Bird-of-paradise (Paradisaea raggiana) is only found on the island nation of New Guinea. Their native diet consists mainly of fruits and arthropods, and the species is an important seed disperser of some fruiting trees in New Guinea.

The beautiful birds are best known for their extravagant courtship displays. They are unique in that they are a lekking species. Up to ten males at a time are known to congregate in leks (display arenas for visiting females) in an effort to impress a potential mate. Males put on a display, which involves clapping of their wings and shaking their heads.

More below the fold!

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5 responses to “Zoo Releases Footage of Bird-of-Paradise Hatching”

  1. Heather Angus Avatar
    Heather Angus

    Wow! Such an amazing video.
    I wonder what, if any, is the evolutionary value of the BoP parents breaking their chicks’ eggs. Any ideas?

  2. Michael Avatar
    Michael

    Heather, that part of the text made no sense to me. If parents break the eggs, the chick inside dies, right? That would have NEGATIVE evolutionary value. (The exception would be if they break the egg when the chick is ready to hatch, to help it get out, but it seems like the text would have mentioned that.) So, what I EXPECTED to read next was that the egg had been removed from the nest and incubated artificially to keep it from being broken. But NOOOO, the next sentence said the staff were feeding it rather than let the parents do that. What does that have to do with breaking eggs??
    I tried the Cincinnati Zoo website to see if maybe the text was garbled in copying and could not find the announcement of this birth.
    I’m stumped.

  3. HeavenlyJane Avatar
    HeavenlyJane

    The egg must have been removed from the nest because the chick hatched in a plastic bowl, not the nest.

  4. Smartypants Avatar
    Smartypants

    I’m wondering that too – it seem like guaranteed extinction! Hopefully someone has the answer.

  5. Mary E. Avatar
    Mary E.

    It’s not a normal behavior for any bird species to deliberately break its eggs, but some individual birds just aren’t very good parents (whether due to inexperience or lack of interest) and won’t properly care for their eggs/chicks, which is what happened here. Since this particular pair of birds treats their eggs too roughly, zoo staff stepped in to incubate and rear the babies.

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