Monkey See, Monkey Hair Do
Takin About A Chinese Treasure

Bouncing Baby 'Baylor''s Happiness Has no Bounds

After a pregnancy lasting almost 23 months, Shanti, a 19-year-old Asian elephant, delivered a healthy 348-pound male calf on the morning of May 4th at the Houston Zoo’s McNair Asian Elephant Habitat. The calf has been named Baylor by the Zoo’s elephant care team in recognition of the unprecedented and ongoing advances made by Baylor College of Medicine’s research team to significantly reduce the threat of a potentially lethal elephant herpes virus.

DSC_0354-mPhotos and video credits: The Houston Zoo



Shanti began exhibiting signs of labor around 10:30 Monday (8th May) night.  Attended by the Houston Zoo’s elephant care team and assisted by the Zoo’s veterinary staff, Shanti delivered the baby at 9:32 a.m. on Tuesday, May 4.   “After months of preparation and tender loving care, the delivery was actually quick and easy for Shanti,” said Large Mammal Curator Daryl Hoffman.  “The keepers helped Baylor get to his feet and he was standing on his own within about 2 hours after his birth,” added Hoffman. 

“Baylor started nursing at 12:05 p.m. Tuesday,” said Hoffman.  “This little elephant has a very good appetite.  In the first 90 minutes after his first meal we saw him nurse more than 10 times,” added Hoffman.  

Immediately after the calf was born, the elephant care team and the Zoo’s veterinary staff performed a neonatal exam.  “We weighed and measured the calf and took a blood sample,” said Houston Zoo Director of Veterinary Services Dr. Joe Flanagan.  Elephant keepers will keep Shanti and Baylor under a 24-hour watch for the next few weeks.   The barn at the McNair Asian Elephant Habitat is temporarily closed to the public but will reopen after the elephant care team can see signs that Baylor has his “sea legs” and is comfortable in his new home.  Baylor is Shanti’s third calf. 

The 8 members of the Houston Zoo’s elephant care team, assisted by the Zoo’s veterinarians and veterinary staff and a core group of Zoo volunteers, have been monitoring Shanti closely for the past 11 months.  The routine intensified over the past 12 weeks with regular ultrasounds to monitor the baby’s health and blood work to gauge the mother’s progesterone level.   Throughout the delivery, Shanti was attended by the entire elephant care team and assisted by all 4 Zoo veterinarians and 3 of the Zoo hospital’s veterinary technicians.

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