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Tuesday, July 7, 2009

Yoh guys, found it at msn jus nw.
Anyway, some members of the zoos that arrived recently.
I find them so CUTE~

Frank, a western lowland gorilla, was 8-months old when this photo was taken in May 2009. Frank stays with his family or troop at the Gorilla Tropics exhibit at the San Diego Zoo.

Two clouded leopards were born at the Smithsonian's National Zoo's Conservation & Reseach centre in Front Royal, Va. on March 24, 2009.Here, the 12-week-old cubs weigh from 5 to 7 pounds. The cubs play with stuffed animals and each other, and their level of interaction with their keepers continues to increase.
This dama gazelle calf was born at the Smithsonian's National Zoo on Nov. 2, 2008 weighing in at 10 pounds. This birth is very significant for the dama gazelle population as it is listed as critically endangered.

The Smithsonian's National Zoo now has a new baby giant elephant-shrew—also known as a sengi. The baby, here about 5 weeks old, is busily exploring the exhibit with its parents.
A female white-naped crane chick, hatched May 23, 2009 at the National Zoo's Conservation and Research Center, is being raised by its grandparents. The two-week-old female chick is an important hatchling to the species survival program.

Three Sumatran tiger cubs -- Damai, Harimau Kayu and Kucing -- play together at the San Diego Zoo's Wild Animal Park. Born Nov. 13, 2008, the cubs were 4 months old at the time of this photo.

This giant jumping rat was born at Prospect Park Zoo in April 2009. This birth is significant because these nocturnal mammals have a small North American population and a low birth rate.

Though baby Miles' mother Noel was attentive to her baby’s needs, she didn’t produce enough milk so the young giraffe had to be bottle fed by zoo keepers at the Houston Zoo.
Anyway, saw this on TV.
"I know not what the future holds, but I know who holds the future."
Sound chim?

8:51 PM