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Lowry Park Zoo Family Expands

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Published: July 3, 2008

Updated: 07/03/2008 07:00 am

TAMPA - Love is in the air at Lowry Park Zoo. The stork has swooped in recently, visiting three sets of parents, all different species. Two pairs of primates became parents and the warthogs down the way had twins.

The cutest, perhaps, was Peanut, the teeny, tiny titi monkey, who clings to his father's back constantly. The father, Cleve, generally totes the baby around and hands him over to the mother, Leap, only to nurse, said Angela Belcher, assistant curator for primates at the Tampa zoo.

Peanut is almost concealed on Cleve's back and can be seen only fleetingly as two tiny eyes set in a golf ball-size head peering out from the fur.

"We've had them since February," Belcher said, referring to the proud parents. "They were introduced here."

Zookeepers knew the two were getting along but weren't sure they had mated.

"The baby was a surprise, and it wasn't a surprise," Belcher said.

Peanut was born in April.

Titi monkeys are found throughout South America. They weigh about 2 pounds fully grown and live in trees. They form small family groups that include parents and offspring, but after a couple of years, Peanut will be separated from his parents and probably taken to another zoo for breeding purposes, Belcher said.

A few doors down, Stewie held a vise grip on his mom, Njano. Stewie is another variety of monkey, a red-tailed guenon, and he was born June 13.

Five guenons were in the pen Wednesday morning, including Nyoni, a female, who stayed close to Njano and Stewie, stealing scratches and caresses to the baby's head.

"She wants to be a mother," Belcher said.

Stewie makes a total of seven guenons, which weigh between 6 and 8 pounds fully grown. They are very social and spend their days jumping, swinging and cavorting around their large pen.

Zoo officials say it's not unusual to have births in the spring, because most of the animals mate in the fall. It's a little unusual for multiple births to take place this time of year.

That may not be the case with the warthogs, which could be described as breeding machines with tusks.

Pogo, the burly father, roamed the pen while the mother, Sybill, hunkered down under a log with her twins, born on June 12. They come out from under the log only once a day for a quick run around, then dive back into shade, animal handler Kendra Stout said.

The litter had included two other baby warthogs, but they died, said Stout, who cares for the animals.

Concealing the young warthogs, which have not been named, is typical behavior for mothers, Stout said.

Pogo and Sybill have had four to five litters since they came to the zoo a few years ago, Stout said, and they know the routine.

Reporter Keith Morelli can be reached at (813) 259-7760 or kmorelli@tampatrib.com.

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