Following nationwide online voting this month, the San Diego Zoo’s new river hippo calf now has a name. The 20-day-old female will be called Amahle (pronounced ah-MA-shay), which means “beautiful one” in Zulu. Her name was revealed today (February 28, 2020) during a live, early-morning television segment on “Good Morning America”—in front of a crowd of enthusiastic San Diego Zoo team members and volunteers.
“The fact that so many people were part of this process has been amazing. Amahle was a name suggested multiple times and it couldn’t be a better fit.” “It is a Zulu name, just like her mom’s, and she certainly is a beautiful one,” said Jennifer Chapman, wildlife care specialist at the San Diego Zoo. “My hope is that those who participated in this naming event will feel a connection with Amahle and are inspired to learn more about river hippos and ways they can help hippos in their native range in Africa.”
Amahle is the ninth calf born at the San Diego Zoo to her 3,600-pound mother, Funani, and she is Funani’s 13th calf. Active and healthy, Amahle currently weighs an estimated 100 pounds.
Guests visiting the San Diego Zoo can see Amahle and her mother in the hippo habitat on Tuesdays, Thursdays and weekends.
The hippopotamus is listed as Vulnerable on the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) Red List of Threatened Species. The primary threats to hippos are illegal and unregulated hunting for meat and the ivory from their canine teeth, as well as habitat loss. Hippos can still be found in a number of countries in sub-Saharan Africa.
The San Diego Zoo is globally recognized and a San Diego icon, hosting close to four million guests each year. At the San Diego Zoo, visitors can watch penguins swim with sharks, observe the behavior of century-old Galápagos tortoises, enjoy the beauty of exotic orchids, marvel at the koalas, explore walkthrough aviaries filled with the songs and colors of rare birds, and appreciate the remarkable power of leopards and jaguars. The San Diego Zoo is accredited by the Association of Zoos and Aquariums and the American Association of Museums as a Botanical Garden. When visitors discover the rare and endangered species at the San Diego Zoo, they are directly contributing, through admissions and on-grounds sales, to the efforts of San Diego Zoo Global, an international non-profit conservation organization that works to fight extinction through recovery efforts for plants and animals worldwide.
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