Monarto Safari Park

Giraffe calf names announced to celebrate World Giraffe Day

This World Giraffe Day, we’re celebrating our contribution to the breeding program working to save the world’s tallest mammal from extinction.

What better way to celebrate these gentle giants than announcing the names of Monarto Zoo’s latest additions, our two adorable two-month-old giraffe boys!
After a public voting competition, Myeisha’s calf has been named Thando, meaning love in Zulu, while Kinky’s son has been named Mabuti, meaning boots in Swahili.

The adorable duo are the 40th and 41st calves to be born at Monarto Zoo, making us the most successful giraffe breeding facility in Australasia.

Classified as vulnerable to extinction in the wild, the two little boys mark an important contribution to the breeding program working to secure a future for the world’s tallest animal, which is facing an uncertain future in the wild.

Habitat loss, poaching and civil unrest has seen giraffe numbers plummet from around 155,000 in 1985 to just 97,000 in 2015, which equates to a decline of almost 40 per cent over three giraffe generations.

This devastating decline saw the giraffe reclassified as vulnerable to extinction last year by the International Union for the Conservation of Nature (IUCN).

There are now fewer giraffe in the wild than African Elephants.

As a conservation charity, Zoos SA is committed to continuing our successful breeding program to ensure generations to come can enjoy the wonder of these tall, gentle creatures.

About Zoos SA

Zoos SA is a not-for-profit conservation charity that exists to connect people with nature and save species from extinction.

Zoos SA acknowledges the Country on which we stand always was, and always will be, Aboriginal land and we pay our deepest respect and gratitude to Kaurna (Adelaide Zoo) and Ngarrindjeri (Monarto Safari Park) Elders, past, present and emerging.

We undertake critical conservation work throughout Australia and acknowledge the traditional custodians of these lands.

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