‘Surprise baby’ anteater joins Mandai Wildlife Group’s River Wonders

Sign up now: Get ST's newsletters delivered to your inbox

The anteater baby is very active and playful, says the keeper, adding it has mostly been following its mother.

The anteater baby is playful, says the keeper, adding it has mostly been following its mother, often clinging to her.

PHOTO: SCREENGRAB FROM MANDAI WILDLIFE RESERVE/FACEBOOK

Follow topic:

SINGAPORE – A baby giant anteater, which is a species known for not breeding often, has joined Mandai Wildlife Reserve’s anteater family.

“This is a surprise baby because we weren’t expecting any more babies due to its father’s age,” said a keeper from River Wonders Terrestrial’s animal care team in a video posted by Mandai Wildlife Reserve on Facebook on June 29.

The baby was born to father Zapata and mother Iapura on April 10, the first day of Hari Raya Puasa. The parents are 20 years old and almost 14, respectively.

This is River Wonders’ sixth anteater birth since it opened in 2014.

Giant anteaters have a single offspring once a year after a gestation period of about six months.

In response to queries from The Straits Times, Mandai Wildlife Group said the pup has not been named yet.

“The personality of the baby is similar to its dad’s – it’s very active and playful,” said the keeper, adding that the baby has mostly been following its mother, often clinging to her back.

The pup has three siblings that have been relocated to other zoos – Singapore’s Night Safari, Thailand’s Nakhon Ratchasima Zoo, and Taiwan’s Taipei Zoo. Their relocation is part of the European Association of Zoos and Aquaria’s Ex-situ Programme, which sees zoos exchanging animals with one another for breeding.

“I hope the baby grows up healthily so it can be part of the breeding programme too, and have more babies in the future,” said the keeper.

The new pup has been microchipped by the wildlife group’s veterinary healthcare team. If it goes to another zoo, the microchip will allow zookeepers there to check its identification.

“You have a passport number (now),” the keeper told the pup with a laugh.

In 2023, Singapore’s four main wildlife parks – Bird Paradise, Night Safari, River Wonders and Singapore Zoo – celebrated

970 births and hatchlings

across 128 species.

River Wonders also welcomed its fifth anteater baby at the park in 2022.

The 2023 births marked the highest number of babies that the wildlife parks have collectively produced since 2013, Mandai Wildlife Group had said earlier.

Correction note: In an earlier version of the story, we said that River Wonders welcomed its fifth anteater baby at the park in 2023 instead of 2022. This has been corrected.

See more on