Animal baby boom at Palestinian zoo after people disappear

Animal baby boom at Palestinian zoo after people disappear





QALQILYA, West Bank (Reuters) - Peacocks, ostriches and baboons joined in an animal baby boom at a Palestinian zoo during the coronavirus closure as they let nature take its course free from human distractions. 
Fifteen animals were born at the tiny Qalqilya Zoo in the Israeli-occupied West Bank during the two months that it shut its doors to visitors - three times more than usual, zoo officials said. 
ā€œThe coronavirus spread at the same time that trips were expected at the zoo. They were canceled and therefore the animals started to give birth,ā€ said zoo veterinarian Sami Khader. 
An ostrich that laid eggs in normal years rarely had the chance to incubate them properly. But this year she produced 11 eggs and ā€œbecause there werenā€™t people around her, she was able to build a nestā€, he said. 
In the monkey enclosure, usually bedeviled by miscarriages, one baboon gave birth, although she had little inclination to take care of the baby. 
ā€œMy father had to bring him to our house,ā€ said the vetā€™s daughter, Hind Khader. ā€œI took care of him and gave him milk.ā€ 
The zoo reopened in late May as Palestinian officials eased COVID-19 restrictions. Now zoo managers hope the newborn attractions will be enough of a draw to compensate for 200,000 lost visitors.

CAM

Popular posts from this blog

That Uplifting Tweet You Just Shared? A Russian Troll Sent It

The Nightmare Scenario That Keeps Election Lawyers Up At Night -- And Could Hand Trump A Second Term

Confronting Bluster šŸ˜”šŸ’¢šŸ—ÆšŸ—Æ