Louisville
Zoo’s 6-foot-2 baby giraffe surviving despite difficulties
((EDITOR’S NOTE:
This is a critical time for the baby giraffe. There are no
opportunities at this time for interviews or photos. Zoo photos
are attached. Regular media updates will be sent out on the
health of the baby as information becomes available.)
A new baby Masai giraffe at the
Louisville Zoo is improving after an uncertain beginning. On
Tuesday, February 17, 11-year-old Malaika gave birth to her
third offspring—a 150 pound, 6-foot-2-inch male giraffe who the
staff named Bakari, which means hopeful. (Pronounced
bah-KAH-ree)
Minutes after keeper staff noticed
Malaika sticking her tail out and walking abnormally, two feet
popped out of her. An hour later, a male calf was on the ground.
As
keeper staff observed the baby, they noticed that he was trying
to stand on his own, but couldn’t. They thought maybe it was
because he was slipping on the barn floor. Teamwork kicked in
and more than a dozen staff members began hauling wheelbarrows
and shovels full of sand into the giraffe barn to assist the
calf. Unfortunately, that didn’t help. Staff then manually
lifted Bakari’s body and helped him to his feet. But the baby’s
legs were so wobbly, he couldn’t stay standing.
Staff became worried, because it is
critical for calves to stand within 24 hours and nurse from
their mother so they can receive essential immunity from
mother’s first milk (called colostrum). Since the calf couldn’t
stand to nurse, the Zoo’s veterinary team conducted a plasma
transfer where horse immunoglobulins (or antibodies) were
transfused into the giraffe through an intravenous line. Two
plasma transfers were necessary to establish a protective immune
system. The giraffe was also given life-saving fluids through
the intravenous line to keep the calf hydrated while staff
worked on getting him accustomed to bottle-feeding.
“Without
the plasma transfer, he would be more likely to have problems
down the road with infections,” Louisville Zoo veterinarian Dr.
Zoli Gyimesi said. “And even with the transfer, he is not out of
the woods yet.”
While most giraffe calves are up and
running in a day, Bakari is still having trouble standing on his
own for long periods. The veterinary team continues to conduct
tests to try to determine the cause and establish a prognosis.
So, baby Bakari is being hand-raised.
He is the 19th calf born at the Zoo.
“While we prefer not to hand-raise
animals and let their mothers raise them, sometimes it is
inevitable,” Louisville Zoo Assistant Mammal Curator Candy
McMahan said. “We always hope for the best, but in the end, we
do what needs to be done to provide the most excellent care
possible for the animal.”
There are now four Masai giraffes at
the Louisville Zoo— baby Bakari; mother Malaika, an 11 -year-old
female; Mariah, a 21-year-old female; and Walker, a 14-year-old
male.
GIRAFFES
Giraffes are the tallest of land mammals and have single births
after a gestation period of 14-16 months. Mothers give birth
while standing and the young fall five to six feet upon
delivery. Offspring are usually 6-feet tall at birth.
Male giraffes grow to be 15-18 feet tall and weigh 1,200-1,800
pounds. The signature long neck only has seven vertebrae, the
same as most mammals. To counteract the demands of such a long
neck, there are valves in the veins of the neck to prevent blood
from rushing back too fast. They also have a massive heart and
extremely high blood pressure which is necessary to force blood
up the seven or eight foot path to the brain.
Photos of Bakari and keeper Karen
Veleta by Kara Bussabarger.