CINCINNATI (AP) — The Cincinnati Zoo says a prematurely born baby hippo is showing some signs of progress.
Zoo spokeswoman Michelle Curley says the female calf born early Tuesday is gaining some strength and had her first pool experience Thursday morning. The pool time should help build muscles and balance and maintain body temperature.
She says the baby is “hanging in there.”
The calf born six weeks early is getting 24-hour attention that includes tube feeding, vet checks and keeping her warm and moist.
The zoo says 17-year-old Bibi gave birth to the first Nile hippo born there in 75 years. The calf was 29 pounds at birth, well below the normal range of birth weight of 55 to 120 pounds and was unable to stand to nurse.
This Tuesday, Jan. 24, 2017, photo provided by the Cincinnati Zoo & Botanical Garden shows a zoo employee swaddling a female Nile hippopotamus calf born to 17-year-old mother Bibi and 35-year-old father Henry early Tuesday, six weeks before the anticipated March 2017 due date, at the zoo in Cincinnati. Cincinnati Zoo & Botanical Garden staffers are providing round-the-clock “critical care” to the baby hippo born prematurely on Tuesday, Jan. 24, 2017, the first Nile hippo born at the zoo in 75 years. Weighing 29 pounds, the calf is well below the normal range of birth weight of 55 to 120 pounds. (Michelle Curley/Cincinnati Zoo & Botanical Garden via AP)


