Visitors to the Cape May County Zoo have a new zebra to see -- "Lydia." (Photo courtesy of Cape May County Zoo)
The Cape May County Zoo has a new addition — “Lydia,” an 18-month-old female Grant’s Zebra, according to a press release.
She came to the zoo from the Como Park Zoo in St. Paul, Minn., and is joining the herd as a mate for “Ziggy,” the lone stallion at the zoo.
She will be the fourth female to join the herd, with “Gretta,” “Gracie” and “Zuri.”
Zebras do not form permanent herds, but rather loosely associated groups and are social animals, with smaller harems consisting of one stallion, a few mares and their offspring, the release states.
Grant’s Zebra are the smallest of the seven subspecies of African Plains Zebra. Habitat loss and civil war have reduced this species historical range and they are facing population declines. This subspecies represents the zebra form of the Serengeti-Mara ecosystem. In zoos, Grant's Zebras live around 40 years, and in the wild up to 20 years.
In announcing the arrival of the Grant's Zebra, Dr. Alex Ernst, associate zoo veterinarian, said, “Lydia’s arrival at the Cape May County Zoo is part of the Species Survival Program (SSP) and her breeding success will be a small, but crucial contribution to the future of her species."
Lydia and the herd are located in the Savanna area of the zoo and can be viewed every day. The Savanna covers approximately 57 acres that is accessible by a raised boardwalk that takes visitors through a forest of native vegetation with watchable wildlife platforms and educational markers that identify and describe the animals and their behavior.
“Programs, like the Species Survival Program (SSP) that the Cape May County Zoo participates in, are designed to optimize genetics through breeding and help ensure that these species won’t be threatened with extinction,” Ernst added.
