X
    Categories: Animals/Petslife

Baby Gorilla Kicked By His Father In Front Of Zoo Visitors For Playing With Tree Branches


A hilarious video has emerged that shows a baby gorilla being kicked by his father in front of zoo visitors.

ADVERTISEMENT

Watch the baby gorilla being kicked by his father

[rumble video_id=v1c0wn domain_id=u7nb2]

Shufai the baby gorilla was playing with the tree branches in Twycross zoo when his father Oumbi took the tree branches away.

He started following his father to take the tree branches back but it didn’t work.

ADVERTISEMENT

Shufai continued to follow him and that’s when Oumbi decided to teach him a lesson.

Rumble

He kicked Shufai in front of zoo visitors. The hilarious video of the father kicking his son to discipline him was posted online. The video went viral, leaving people in stitches.

ADVERTISEMENT

Shufai was born on September 24, 2016, to Ozala and Oumbi and the family lives at the Twycross Zoo in England which is set in more than 80 acres with around 500 animals of almost 100 species to see, including many endangered animals and also native species in the Zoo’s Nature Reserve.

ADVERTISEMENT

According to its website, ‘Twycross Zoo is now renowned as a World Primate Centre and has a wide variety of monkeys and apes including the UK’s only group of bonobos.’

Rumble

They have breeding groups of many endangered primate species. They also hold a range of other species including giraffes, snow leopards, penguins, meerkats, tapirs, kangaroos, snakes, flamingos and the world’s rarest big cat, the Amur leopard, and more.

ADVERTISEMENT

In 2013, the zoo won BIAZA’s Best Sustainable Zoo or Aquarium and Best Education Project (public and general visitor) awards and was commended in the Significant Advance in Husbandry and Welfare, Significant Advances in Zoo and Wildlife Medicine, and Best Education Project (Schools and Educational Institutions) categories.

ADVERTISEMENT
Rumble

The Twycross Zoo Conservation Initiative is supporting over 55 projects in dozens of countries around the world.

ADVERTISEMENT

Some of these include Ape Action Africa in Cameroon, Lola Ya Bonobo in the Democratic Republic of the Congo and the Cao Vit Conservation Programme in Vietnam, according to its website.

 

 

[rumble video_id=v5dai5 domain_id=u7nb2]

ADVERTISEMENT