Two female giraffes have joined the gang at the world’s oldest zoo in Vienna during its fourth COVID-19 closure.
The existing giraffes at Schoenbrunn Zoo in the Austrian capital Vienna, named Sofie, Fleur and Obi, all rubbernecked to see females Carla and Rita arrive at the animal park and join the gang.
The Viennese zoo said the two females used to be part of the Schoenbrunn population but were relocated to a nearby center when their enclosure underwent reforms.
Carla and Rita lived with Kimbar, Europe’s oldest bull giraffe for many years, but he was too old to be transported to the newly-designed giraffe area in Schoenbrunn Zoo, so the females remained with him until his death in May at the age of 27.
Kimbar, who was a resident of the Tiergarten Schonbrunn Zoo in Austria's capital Vienna was euthanized on 14th May.
Transported by the trailer, Carla and Rita arrived at the Viennese zoo on 25th November, and the new arrivals are gradually getting to know their herd members.
Zoo director Stephan Hering-Hagenbeck said: “In the wild, giraffes live in larger groups, the structure of which changes again and again. We, therefore, assume that the merger will be beneficial for everyone.”
Sofie, Fleur, and Obi are reticulated giraffes (Giraffa camelopardalis reticulata), also known as Somali giraffes, however, Carla and Rita are from a subspecies that has intermingled over the course of their family tree and they are no longer integrated into the park’s breeding program.
The zoo said in a statement: “Before anyone can visit the zoo’s herd of giraffes, they will have to be patient. The zoo has been closed again since Monday due to the nationwide lockdown. For Vienna Zoo, this is the fourth coronavirus-related closure in the last two years.”
The zoo added that the restrictions “pose financial challenges” with regards to “feeding, energy, and staff” and that the “transportation of the giraffes alone cost around EUR 2,000”.
Vienna, Austria
Nov. 25, 2021
Source: Tiergarten Schonbrunn
#Giraffe #Animals
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