Posted by Kirsten Pisto, communications
What is sweeter than a brand new downy-white flamingo chick?
How about three!
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A keeper gently holds one of the new chicks. Photo by Ryan Hawk/WPZ. |
The tiny chicks hatched one after another on August 31,
September 5 and the last one just a few days ago, September 16.
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Peeking into the incubator where the chicks stay cozy. Photo by Ryan Hawk/WPZ. |
The chicks are being hand raised and hand-fed by a team of
dedicated staff, ensuring a higher chance of survival. Several times daily, the
chicks are fed a mixture of whole egg powder, a little corn oil, a calcium supplement,
vitamin E and water, known as a chick “slurry!”
When the little
chicks are old enough to eat on their own, in about 30 days, they will join the
adult colony in the flamingo exhibit. The flamingo keepers also must exercise
the chicks.
The flamingo chicks practice swimming in the baby pool chick tub. Video by Ryan Hawk/WPZ.
Leading an exercise session for three flamingo
chicks might be the best job in the world. The keepers lead the chicks to an
outdoor area where they are encouraged to walk and stretch to strengthen their
tiny legs. The chicks also get swimming lessons in a small tub to prepare them for
swimming safely in the pool in the flamingo exhibit.
Chilean
flamingos have a range that extends from an elevation of 15,420 feet in the
altiplano (high mountain plateau), to lowland saline estuaries where some
overwinter along the southwest Chilean coast.
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Stretching those feet! These
hardy, social birds of South America stand an impressive 40 to 42 inches tall when full grown. Photo by Ryan Hawk/WPZ. |
The downy-white feathers they sport will slowly become gray over
the next month and won’t turn pink until about a year. Within two years, the
juveniles will have their fabulous, full pink feathering. A group of flamingos
is sometimes called a “flamboyance”.
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Photo by Ryan Hawk/WPZ. |
Right now the flamingo chicks have small, straight bills,
but in a few months their beaks will begin to curve. They will use this to
their advantage as they filter food by holding their bill upside down while
feeding from and skimming the water.
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The chicks will soon join the rest of the flock in the flamingo exhibit. Photo by Ryan Hawk/WPZ. |
These three chicks bring the total number of flamingo
hatchings to 14 since the exhibit opened in 2008. Woodland Park Zoo supports
the
Flamingo Research & Conservation in Southern South America project through its Wildlife
Survival Fund. The project focuses on research, management, conservation,
capacity development, and outreach activities at key sites throughout the
flamingo distribution range. Continued monitoring is necessary in order to
track conservation status of lowland wetlands, and to determine factors driving
flamingo use of these wetlands.
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Chilean flamingos, Phoenicopterus
chilensis on exhibit in the Temperate Forest. Photo by Ryan Hawk/WPZ.
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