ZOO WELCOMES BABY COLOBUS MONKEY

Colubus monkey Violet holds her baby at the Oregon Zoo. ©Oregon Zoo/ photo by Shervin Hess

First colobus monkey born at the Oregon Zoo since 2006 

The Oregon Zoo’s primate family grew by a pound on Tuesday morning as colobus monkeys Violet and Kiku welcomed a new baby. The newborn colobus monkey is thriving and can already be seen peeking a pink face out from the safety of its mom’s fur.

“Colobus monkeys make wonderful parents,” said Colleen Reed, a keeper who cares for the zoo’s primates. “The adults work together to raise the babies. In addition to Violet and Kiku, Makari, our other adult female, is showing a lot of interest in the baby as well.”

See video of the new baby colobus monkey at http://bit.ly/babycolobus

This style of collective rearing is known as alloparenting. As the baby grows, the adults will take turns caring for it. Biologists believe this parenting style accounts for colobus babies’ striking all-white fur, which makes them easy to identify within a large family group. The baby will begin to take on its black-and-white adult coloring over the next several months.

“Violet and her baby are doing really well,” said Reed. “The baby has already learned to hold onto her fur as they explore their habitat together.”

This is the first colobus monkey born at the Oregon Zoo since 2006, and the first baby for mother Violet, 4. It’s the fifth baby for her mate Kiku, 27. Caregivers won’t know whether the newborn is male or female until its first veterinary check, probably in about a month.

Visitors to the zoo can catch a glimpse of the new baby in the Africa Rainforest, where the colobus monkeys share their waterfall habitat with the Allen’s swamp monkeys. Because of their calm nature, the colobus monkeys do very well in this multi-species exhibit.

“A lot of people miss the colobus habitat, since it’s a bit tucked away,” said Reed. “It’s in a beautiful part of the zoo, between bats and flamingos.”

As part of the Metro family, the Oregon Zoo helps make greater Portland a great place to call home. Committed to conservation, the zoo is currently working to save endangered California condors, Oregon silverspot and Taylor’s checkerspot butterflies, western pond turtles and Oregon spotted frogs. Other projects focused on saving animals from extinction include studies on polar bears, orangutans and cheetahs.

Support from the Oregon Zoo Foundation enhances and expands the zoo’s efforts in conservation, education and animal welfare. Members, donors and corporate and foundation partners help the zoo make a difference across the region and around the world.

The zoo opens at 9:30 a.m. daily and is located five minutes from downtown Portland, just off Highway 26. The zoo is also accessible by MAX light rail line. Visitors who travel to the zoo via MAX receive $1.50 off zoo admission. Call TriMet Customer Service, 503-238-RIDE (7433), or visit trimet.org for fare and route information.

 

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