 |
|
|
Germany’s
latest animal attraction, the female polar bear cub born in Nuremberg, has been named Flocke, or
"flake" as in snow.
The name was chosen after a week-long competition, during
which nearly 30,000 suggestions poured in to the town hall. Twenty per cent of
the emails and letters came from abroad - some from as far away as New Zealand and the United States.
Among the name suggestions that poured in were Alaska, Snow White and
Nanouk, which means polar bear in the language of the Inuit, the indigenous
people who inhabit the Arctic region.
Flocke is now around five weeks old and being raised by
bottle at Nuremberg
zoo.
Nuremberg
governing Mayor Ulrich May said the jury decided unanimously to keep with the
name that the cub's handlers had given it because of its brilliant white fur. "They
have the closest relationship to the animal," he said. The cub was taken
from its mother on January 8 amid fears she might harm it after she was seen
roaming around her enclosure carrying her offspring between her jaws and
dropping it twice. It now weighs 2,950 grams. "Apart from sleeping and
eating it doesn't do anything," said Harald Hagen, one of the three
keepers who have been looking after Flocke.
Flocke could be shown to the public at the end of March or
the beginning of April. "We hope
that Flocke will turn into a snowball and then into an avalanche against
climate change," said zoo director Dag Encke.
Fans of the polar bear can log on to its new website
(www.eisbaerflocke.nuernberg.de) where they can see photographs of the animal
and read about its progress.
It is the second polar bear cub to be bottle-raised in Germany after
male bear star Knut, who was abandoned by his mother in Berlin Zoo in December
2006 and brought up by a keeper.
© 2007 - 2008 - eFluxMedia