100% Locally Owned, Independent and Free

100% Locally Owned, Independent and Free

Baby boom at the zoo: tiny twins born on New Year’s Day mark start of new arrivals

Do you have a news tip? Click here to send to our news team.

Work on retirement village enters final phase

Work has commenced on the final stage of villas at a Sunshine Coast retirement community after the previous four stages sold out. The last stage More

‘No approval’: agent faces fine over free community trailer

A local real estate agent has been ordered to relocate a "free service" in his local community. Palmview agent Reagan Genrich has been issued a More

Early design concept revealed for stadium upgrade

A key step has been reached regarding the expansion of the Sunshine Coast's main stadium, which is set to host events of the 2032 More

‘Long road’: new bar space to open in beachside suburb

A rooftop bar overlooking the ocean will open ahead of the Easter long weekend, marking a major addition to the Coast’s beachfront hospitality scene. The More

Truck rolls over on motorway during peak hour

A truck rollover on the Sunshine Motorway forced the temporary closure of lanes during peak hour on Thursday morning. Southbound lanes were closed after the More

Museum officials appeal for help in milestone year

A “much-loved” Sunshine Coast museum needs more volunteers to ensure it can stay open often. Nambour Museum board members have urged people to help at More

A baby boom is expected at a Sunshine Coast zoo, which has already ushered in the new year with tiny twins.

Several babies were likely to be welcomed to Wildlife HQ in 2023 and some newcomers have already arrived, with a pair of emperor tamarins making their entrance on New Year’s Day.

“Wildlife HQ is expecting 2023 to be the year of the babies,” zookeeper Sue Tonga said via a media release.

“We have spent the last few years creating new primate habitats and pairing up endangered primates.

“This year, we can look forward to the results of our hard work and expect to have baby siamangs, white-cheeked gibbons, lemurs and marmosets.”

The zoo announced the tamarins’ arrival on social media.

“We are thrilled by the new additions and can’t wait to see what else the new year has in store for us. Hopefully, plenty more animal births on the way.”

The tamarins were the first offspring of Pedro and Santiago and were yet to be named.

Zoo CEO Jarrod Schenk said staff were delighted to welcome them.

“We are very excited to have the new additions to the zoo family,” he said.

“Pedro and Santiago were paired up towards the beginning of 2022 as part of a national breeding program for this endangered species.

“We can now expect the pair to continue to produce twins every six months.

“Before we know it, the family unit will have gone from a pair to a dozen animals.

“Each set of twins will help the parents care for the next offspring and learn valuable parenting and life skills.”

The tamarin family is expected to grow rapidly in coming years. Picture: Wildlife HQ.

Emperor Tamarins are among the smallest monkeys, only 25cm in length and 500g in weight.

They are native to the southwest Amazon basin and are easily identified by their long, white whiskers that resemble a moustache.

They are threatened by habitat destruction and are collected from the wild for the pet trade, so the growing family at Wildlife HQ is crucial to the species’ future.

“We are very excited that Pedro and Santiago will be able to build a family here at Wildlife HQ under the care of our zoo-keeping team,” Mr Schenk said.

“Some of the offspring may one day move to other zoos to start families of their own in years to come.”

Visitors can see the emperor family on display in the habitat adjacent to the cafe.

As the babies grow, they will start to adventure off their parents back and explore the exhibit.

Emperor tamarins are naturally curious so will want to see the visitors too.

Local journalists supporting local people. Help keep independent and fair Sunshine Coast news coming by subscribing to our free daily news feed. All it requires is your name and email. See SUBSCRIBE at the top of this article.

Subscribe to SCN’s free daily news email

This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.
This field is hidden when viewing the form
[scn_go_back_button] Return Home
Share