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Successful Orangutan Infant Rearing at the Toledo Zoo using multiple training and rearing techniques. Preceding birth. Began training with doll and manipulation Ultra sounding Leave on exhibit where she will remain calm, bed heavily Facility design did not facilitate night watches.
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SuccessfulOrangutan Infant Rearing at the Toledo Zoo using multiple training and rearing techniques
Preceding birth Began training with doll and manipulation Ultra sounding Leave on exhibit where she will remain calm, bed heavily Facility design did not facilitate night watches
Kutai was acclimated to a toy orangutan, and rewarded for approaching it when it “vocalized”
Kutai was trained to respond to the cue “Feed the Baby”, and would present her breast though the bars to the toy orangutan
She would also allow the keepers to manipulate her nipples to check for lactation
When it was discovered that Kutai was pregnant, we began acclimating her to ultra sound training
We began by having the keeper use the wand, then passed the behavior to the vet staff, and then eventually an ultrasound technician
We were able to map the entire pregnancy and better predict parturition
Protocol At Birth • Give 48-72 hours of observation as long as the baby looks okay • Work with mom to encourage maternal behavior • Encourage proper infant placement • Verbal reinforcement for nursing
Born on exhibit April 23, 2004. • Found by the keeper, away from his mother in an off exhibit cage • Had been cleaned and the umbilicus had been taken care of • Was hypothermic and needed immediate medical care
He was at the hospital for 4 days, then we began bringing him to the building to allow the orangutans to see him
At 13 days, his incubator was moved to the Ape House, within 4 feet of orangutan exhibit
We worked with Kutai to allow him to nurse through bars first, then supplemented with formula
We also would sit in the holding cage with him and let him get comfortable, while Kutai sat on the other side of a divider
We would also close him in by himself to allow him to adapt to the cage
At 5 months of age when Kutai was not showing signs that she would take full care, we began to allow MJ access to see the baby as well • Kutai was picking him up at this time but would eventually put him down and walk away, with Bajik crawling forward on his own to eat. • We needed a mother to carry him all the time before we could put him in the main exhibit
At 6 months, we began allowing him to have short interactions with MJ. MJ laid down by Bajik and rested her hand on him
At around 7-8 months we began leaving him in with MJ for the entire day, with her bringing him forward and allowing him to eat
MJ, within a little more than a week, refused to separate from Bajik, so we allowed them to be together overnight.
When introduced back to the group, MJ sustained an injury that required medical treatment. • Kutai, retrieved Bajik and cared for him overnight
Boomer, the following day, picked up Bajik and has cared for him ever since, bringing him up for feeds when asked.
Boomer carries Bajik, shares his nest, and cuddles him if Bajik is upset
Khali • We used the same trained behaviors again for Kutai’s second pregnancy, both ultra sounding and reinforcing maternal care with the toy orangutan, as well as nipple manipulation
Khali was born on May13, 2006 and Kutai cleaned the infant and exhibited appropriate maternal behavior • Kutai was brought off exhibit so that we could closely observe her maternal care
…but began to hide under blankets and not allow observations At 72 hours, the infant was removed to be checked
The infant was allowed to nurse from Kutai while she was sedated, then reintroduced when she awoke
Kutai was then given another 72 hours with constant observation • Khali was then removed • Nursing observed infrequently • Infant not as bright and alert • Kutai not holding baby in proper position • Low blood glucose level
Started bottle feeding formula while also encouraging Kutai to nurse the baby through the bars
We used the same technique with Khali • Would get up and come forward when baby cried • Manipulated her own breast into the baby’s mouth • At 12 days (5 days post-removal), as Kutai was allowing Khali to nurse, we adjusted the baby onto Kutai and let go, allowing her to take the baby back
We then encouraged Kutai to nurse the baby, and would ask her to bring the baby forward when possible for supplementary feeds
Over the next few months, the bottle feeds were reduced as the nursing sessions increased both in numbers and duration
In this time period, as Kutai cared for Khali, Boomer continued to care for Bajik and the re-introduction was smooth and uneventful Kutai and Boomer have both become great parents and share the care of the infants
Kutai spends quite a bit of time playing with Bajik now and although protective, will allow Boomer to have contact with Khali
The Toledo Zoo’s success has been due to: • Training positive maternal and cooperative behaviors prior to birth • Strongly encouraging mother and conspecifics involvement in the infant care • Flexibility and thinking outside the box