Same-sex flamingo couple hatches egg, cares for chick at California zoo

A pair of flamingos have become first-time parents at the San Diego Zoo Safari Park after hatching an egg together. And they’re both dads.

The male foster parents — both in their 40s — are raising one of six chicks born this year at the North County park, which cares for nearly 100 lesser flamingos with their distinctive long legs, flexible necks and pink feathers.

The same-sex duo’s unusual path to parenthood came after wildlife care staffers noticed the two working together to build a nest. Flamingos at the park don’t have names but are known by their colored leg band numbers — in this case, White 77 and White 26.

“They started paying a lot of attention to an empty nest mound, taking turns sitting on it, manicuring it. They built it up, just the two of them, but obviously weren’t laying an egg since it was two males,” recalled Erin Massey, a lead wildlife care specialist who has been at the park for 27 years.

A chick that is being raised by a same-sex lesser flamingo pair at the Safari Park. (Ana Ramirez / The San Diego Union-Tribune) 

Same-sex pairings of males or females occur in some animals in captivity and in nature. The park previously had a bonded pair of Chilean flamingos, both females, raise a chick together after they both laid eggs. Before that, a pair of male crowned cranes fostered a chick together after they were given a fertile egg, Massey said.

Because the two flamingos were exhibiting strong nesting behaviors, staffers decided to give them a fake egg to see what would happen.

Part of the motivation was to keep them busy so they’d leave alone other pairs that were caring for eggs. Flamingos are very social and nest close to each other, and sometimes dominant birds will kick less-assertive birds out of their nests.

Wildlife care staff also wanted to see how they’d do with the fake egg to see if they were good foster parent candidates.

“Once we gave them the fake egg, they were both showing a lot of interest,” Massey said. “They were very excited. They were talking to each other. They were standing over the egg. One of the males got onto the nest immediately and sat down right away.”

For the next several weeks, she said, White 77 and White 26 were doing “exactly what we would expect any regular pair of nesting flamingos to do,” including taking turns sitting in the conical-shaped nest.

A real egg

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