• Photo
In this photo taken Thursday, July 19, 2012, Matt Evans, holds a 13-day-old Cuban crocodile hatchling in Washington. (AP Photo/Jacquelyn Martin)

In this photo taken Thursday, July 19, 2012, Matt Evans, holds a 13-day-old Cuban crocodile hatchling in Washington. (AP Photo/Jacquelyn Martin)

  • Strange News
Wisconsin boy gets handwritten…

MILWAUKEE (AP) — It might not be unusual for schoolchildren to write to the president or …

NYPD officer tries to help cat…

NEW YORK (AP) — Authorities say a New York police officer who went after a cat stuck in a…

Who let the dogs out? Intoxicated woman
Who let the dogs out? Intoxicated woman

Laurel County Sheriff John Root says in a statement that a …

Nuclear waste on parade?
Nuclear waste on parade?

Radioactive waste trucked through Richland, Washington using …

Ducklings saved with cell phone app
Ducklings saved with cell phone app

A cell phone app is credited for saving two ducklings. The baby…

Advertisement

After decades, Cuban crocodiles born at DC zoo

First hatched at the zoo in nearly 25 years

Updated: Friday, 20 Jul 2012, 11:54 AM EDT
Published : Friday, 20 Jul 2012, 11:54 AM EDT

WASHINGTON (AP) — Two endangered Cuban crocodiles have hatched at the National Zoo in Washington.

The hatchings are considered genetically valuable because their mother, Dorothy, was caught in the wild. Dorothy is thought to be 55 years old and zookeepers figured she had stopped laying eggs years ago.

But when they discovered she had laid eggs, they took great care to incubate them for months. Only two of the eggs hatched successfully, the first Cuban crocs to do so at the zoo in nearly 25 years.

Scientists believe there are fewer than 6,000 Cuban crocs remaining in the wild in two small areas of Cuba.

U.S. zoos are trying to expand the population, though births are rare. There have been a handful of hatchings in Florida and Kentucky zoos.

Advertisement
Advertisement

Advertisement