Baby Elephant Shrew - February 2009

Uploaded
2009-02-26T20:06:27.000Z
Creator
National Zoo
Views
109,947
Video Title
Baby Elephant Shrew - February 2009
Description
The Smithsonians National Zoo now has a new baby giant elephant-shrew—also known as a sengi. Keepers at the Small Mammal House did not know it had been born until they saw three elephant-shrews in the exhibit instead of two. The birth was planned as part of a captive breeding program, but baby elephant-shrews typically remain buried deep in their nest for the first several weeks of life. The baby, now about three-weeks-old, is busily exploring the exhibit with its parents. Elephant-shrews are neither elephant nor shrew, but belong to their own group of ancient mammals. They are distantly related to aardvarks, sea cows, like manatees and dugongs, hyraxes and elephants. Native to eastern Kenya and Tanzania, the black and rufous giant elephant-shrews is listed as vulnerable to extinction.
Video Duration
1 min 36 sec
YouTube Keywords
zoo "national zoo" "smithsonian national zoo" "dc zoo" animals science conservation
YouTube Category
Pets & Animals
Topic
Zoology;Animals;Veterinary medicine;Animal health
See more by
SmithsonianNZP
Data Source
National Zoo
YouTube Channel
SmithsonianNZP
Type
YouTube Videos
Record ID
yt_-wrIOW8mcvQ