Showing posts with label #mommy #mommyblog #expecting #orangutan #pregnancy #pregnant #baby #zooborn #elpaso #elpasozoo. Show all posts
Showing posts with label #mommy #mommyblog #expecting #orangutan #pregnancy #pregnant #baby #zooborn #elpaso #elpasozoo. Show all posts

Tuesday, June 23, 2015

Infant Developmental Stages

Orangutans have the longest infant development period of all the great apes. It is commonly divided into three stages.

Infant (0-3 Years)
- Soon after birth, infants learn to use their fingers to grip onto their mothers’ chests. An infant's grip is extremely firm, capable of supporting its own body weight with just their hands.
- Two weeks following birth, infants usually have learned how to sit upright and use its hands.
- Babies begin eating soft fruit, in addition to nursing, at around three months of age. Initially mothers help prepare the solid food by grinding it up with their teeth, then giving it to their young to chew.
- Around two years of age, infants transition from hanging onto their mother's chest to riding on their backs.

Juvenile (3-7 Years)
- Mothers begin to wean (transition from nursing to solid foods) their young as juveniles, around three to four years of age.
- Increasing independence leads juveniles to sometimes travel alone.
- Juveniles no longer share their mothers' night nests and begin building their own. The juveniles' nests remain close to their mothers and are often in the same tree.
- At around four years of age, juveniles begin to climb and search for their own food.

Adolescent (7-10 Years)
- Upon gaining independence from their mothers, adolescent orangutans will often travel widely before settling in a permanent home range. Males will travel further from their mother's home range than females, who often establish adjacent home ranges.
- Female adolescents often stay with their mothers longer than males. If the mother has another baby, the female adolescent often helps her mother care for the infant, learning maternal behaviors.
- Females are considered adults with the birth of their first infant. This usually takes place beginning between 14 and 16 years of age. Males are considered adults with the emergence of cheek pads, a throat pouch, and a developed long call. This usually takes place as late as 19 or 20 years of age.

Tuesday, February 24, 2015

About Ibu & Butch

The El Paso Zoo is home to a pair of Sumatran orangutans named Ibu and Butch. Here's some more personal information about our expecting parents:


ABOUT IBU


Ibu was born August 1, 1991 at the Audubon Zoo in New Orleans and came to the El Paso Zoo on June 16, 1997. This is the first pregnancy for 23-year-old Ibu.
Ibu is an intelligent, curious, petite orangutan. She has been training for husbandry and motherhood for several years. Ibu is an artist who loves bright colors. Her work has been published in a book available on www.amazon.com titled, “Fur in My Paint.”Ibu likes chapstick and painting her nails.
Ibu knows a wide variety of commands that allow her to communicate with trainers, with who she has developed a trust-based relationship. She voluntarily presented urine samples for pregnancy testing and also presents her stomach to receive sonograms. Currently Ibu is training to voluntarily present her future baby to her trainers for medical examinations and additional feeding by using a wood block orangutan doll that is the same size and weight as a baby orangutan. She is gradually beginning to use a stuffed animal baby orangutan. If you would like to purchase a stuffed orangutan baby for Ibu to practice her mothering skills, you can do so at the El Paso Zoo gift shop.

ABOUT BUTCH


Butch was born at the Oklahoma City Zoo on August 19, 1985 and came to the El Paso Zoo from the Cincinnati Zoo on March 29, 2011. This will be 29-year-old Butch’s first time as a father.
He’s very shy and has a tall and lanky build. Butch is very detail-oriented and highly observant. He always notices and carefully considers subtle changes in his environment, inspecting them closely. He likes classical music, special orangutan-friendly chalk, and building blocks.

SUMATRAN ORANGUTANS


Orangutan, or “orang hutan” literally translates into English as “person of the forest. Of all the apes in the world, only oranutans come from Asia. Orangutans have shaggy, reddish-brown hair. Some males may grow white or yellow beards. Otherwise, orangutans have bare faces, long arms and curled fingers and toes. Functionally, orangutans have four hands rather than two hands and two feet. Orangutans are the largest tree-living mammal in the world.

Tuesday, January 27, 2015

Welcome to Ibu’s Mommy Blog!


The purpose of this blog is for all of Ibu’s friends, the El Paso Community, supporters of orangutans and new mommies to share and follow her extraordinary and exciting pregnancy.

Ibu’s pregnancy is exciting because an orangutan birth could be one of the most important conservation achievements in the history of the El Paso Zoo. The El Paso Zoo has focused on Sumatran orangutan conservation efforts as one of its top priorities over the past 10 years with support from the El Paso Zoological Society Conservation Fund. Financial support has aided programs in Indonesia both rescuing and relocating hundreds of injured, orphaned and displaced orangutans. The zoo has further expanded its conservation efforts to include: a more targeted education programs; the further development of our palm oil smart phone app, and; a partnership with UTEP sending Zoo staff to Indonesia to assist with “hands on” orangutan conservation. Having a pregnancy and possibly a birth takes the El Paso Zoo to another level of positive conservation impact.

Ibu’s pregnancy is extraordinary because she is one of only 12 females in 27 Association of Zoos and Aquariums (AZA) accredited institutions with Sumatran orangutans with a breeding recommendation. Maintaining a breeding population in accredited zoos is an integral component to species’ future survival due to the pressure on wild populations. Likewise, while female orangutans reach puberty at about eight years of age, an orangutan is not ready for her own baby until she is in her mid-to-late teens. Orangutan babies nurse until about 6 years of age. Also, orangutans only give birth about every eight years – the longest time between births of any mammal on earth – resulting in only four or five births in a lifetime. Many conservationists predict that if any of the five species of great apes become extinct in the wild during this century it will be the Sumatran orangutan. The wild population has declined dramatically by over 50 percent during the past few decades, with an estimated wild population of only 7,300.

This blog will track her medical progress, journey to birth, steps for mommy and baby preparedness, exclusive photos and footage of the expecting parents and new baby (including sonogram pictures!) as well as information about Sumatran orangutans worldwide.


We're Expecting!