Georgia Safari Conservation Park welcomes new babies, including endangered species
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Georgia Safari Conservation Park welcomes new babies, including endangered species Georgia Safari Conservation Park, a 530-acre conservation-focused safari destination, announced several new animal births and additions, including two critically endangered species.
Georgia Safari Conservation Park welcomes new babies, including endangered species The American Humane-certified Park, recognized as one of TIME’s World’s Greatest Places in 2025, recently welcomed an addax calf, two pancake tortoises and five scimitar-horned oryx to its collection.
Georgia Safari Conservation Park welcomes new babies, including endangered species The new arrivals include Briar, a female addax calf, born to mother Clover and father Kamalu. The park also added two juvenile pancake tortoises, named Maple and Syrup, through a partnership with Dalton State College Turtle Assurance Colony. Additionally, five female scimitar-horned oryx, named Bara, Karoo, Mojave, Sahara and Yuma, have joined the park’s herd.
Georgia Safari Conservation Park welcomes new babies, including endangered species Addax are a critically endangered species, with fewer than 100 believed to remain in the wild. Three additional females in the park’s addax herd are also believed to be pregnant. The critically endangered pancake tortoises are expected to be introduced to Sunny, the park’s resident male. This is part of ongoing conservation management to support the species’ propagation and long-term sustainability.
Georgia Safari Conservation Park welcomes new babies, including endangered species
Georgia Safari Conservation Park welcomes new babies, including endangered species
Georgia Safari Conservation Park welcomes new babies, including endangered species
Georgia Safari Conservation Park welcomes new babies, including endangered species