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Check out this rare (and VERY cute) baby okapi!

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baby-okapiImage source, Chester Zoo
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Zookeepers have named the female calf Nia Nia after a village in the Democratic Republic of Congo – the only place in the world where okapis are found in the wild.

baby-okapiImage source, Chester Zoo
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Aww, look at those beautiful eyes! Conservationists say the new arrival is a ‘vital’ boost to the endangered species breeding programme. Despite their protected status, the species has suffered a 50% decline in the past two decades - a result of hunting for its meat and skin, habitat loss and civil unrest in the Democratic Republic of Congo.

baby-okapiImage source, Chester Zoo
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Guess what - okapi's can lick their own ears! And aren't these ears glorious! The okapi’s tongue measures between 14 and 18 inches long – that’s long enough to clean its ears and wash its eyelids. Amazing!

baby-okapiImage source, Chester Zoo
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Keepers at Chester Zoo have described the rare new okapi calf as “all ears and long, spindly legs!” The okapi’s zebra-like stripes on its back legs allow offspring to easily follow their mothers into the dense forests in the Democratic Republic of Congo, keeping them well hidden from predators.

baby-okapiImage source, Chester Zoo
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Nia Nia spent the first few weeks of her life snuggled up in a cosy nest and has only recently stepped outside for the first time. Her mum is seven-years-old and called K’tusha.

baby-okapiImage source, Chester Zoo
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The best fact has been saved 'til last... Newborn okapi's don’t take their first poo until they reach one month old!