"So far, the rhino calf appears healthy and we have observed frequent nursing shortly after birth, which is encouraging," Potter Park zoo veterinarian Ronan Eustace said in a news release.
The mother and calf are not expected to appear in front of the public until weather allows in the spring of 2020. In the meantime, zoo officials said they would bond in the zoo's rhino barn.
"This is a monumental moment for Potter Park Zoo that has taken our staff years of planning and hard work," said the zoo's director, Cynthia Wagner. "We are dedicated to conserving rhinos and couldn't be more excited about this successful black rhino birth."
Black rhinos were once prevalent across most of Africa, but their populations declined dramatically as European hunters and settlers pursued the animals, according to Save the Rhino. The number of rhinos in the wild dropped to fewer than 2,500 in 1995, but conservation efforts have since helped to double that population to as many as 5,500 today, according to the World Wildlife Fund.
There are about 50 black rhinos in the care of North American zoos accredited by the Association of Zoos and Aquariums, according to Potter Park Zoo officials. The zoos are managed by the Species Survival Plan, officials said, which led to the match between Doppsee and her mate, Phineus.
Doppsee began living in Lansing in 2011, according to the Lansing State Journal. Phineus moved from Texas to Lansing in 2017, officials said.
"I am absolutely thrilled we had the opportunity to breed black rhino," Amy Morris-Hall, executive director of the Potter Park Zoological Society, told the State Journal. "That we had a successful birth here is just thrilling for everybody at the zoo."
About the Author