We get overexcited every time something cute comes around, whether it’s puppy cafes or adorable behaviour at Chester Zoo, which is exactly what we’re coming to you with. The world’s tallest mammal, the Rothchild’s giraffe, has been born at Chester Zoo to new mum Orla, with the joyous scene captured by the zoo’s CCTV cameras, at 11:30pm on Tuesday 12 March.
Footage shows the calf falling from a height of six feet onto a bed of soft straw following a 472 day pregnancy and a labour lasting more than three hours. The leggy newcomer can then be seen stumbling to its feet and suckling from mum for the first time – all within just 30 minutes of being born.
Chester Zoo keepers are yet to determine if the two-day old giraffe is male or female and have said the calf, having been born just two days ago, already weighs more than 70kg and stands at six feet tall – but will grow to be more than 18 foot tall and weigh 1,000kg.
Rosie Owen, who is a zookeeper on the giraffe team and was one of the first to see the new arrival, said: “Giraffes give birth standing up and so they really do enter world in dramatic fashion! Orla’s calf landed with quite a bump when it fell around six feet onto the floor, but this is totally normal and is actually really important part of the birth process – with the impact from the fall stimulating the calf and encouraging it to takes its very first breath.
“So far mum and baby are doing really well and, at just two days old, they’re spending some quiet time getting to know one another. Orla is an experienced mum, and so we’re seeing all the right signs from her, she’s very nurturing and allows her little one suckle often while giving them little nudges of encouragement – especially as her calf is a little unsteady on its long legs.”
Tens of thousands of Rothschild’s giraffes were once found in Kenya, Uganda and Sudan, however their population has suffered a 90% decline in recent years as a direct result of poaching and habitat loss.
With just 2,500 estimated to remain across the whole of Africa, and the last major stronghold now in Kenya and Uganda, the International Union for the Conservation of Nature (IUCN) has listed the species as vulnerable – which means it faces a high chance of becoming extinct in the future.
Experts at the zoo are currently working on the ground in Uganda alongside its in-country partners, The Giraffe Conservation Foundation and Uganda Wildlife Authority, to help monitor and safeguard the animals in the wild. This vital work has now seen the population increase for the fourth consecutive year thanks to decades of conservation efforts.