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Denver Zoo welcomes fluffy gray kea chick, bringing zoo population of New Zealand parrot species to 38

Scarlet is the third baby to be born at the zoo this year

DENVER, CO - AUGUST 1:  Danika Worthington - Staff portraits at the Denver Post studio.  (Photo by Eric Lutzens/The Denver Post)
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The Denver Zoo is a hot bed for babies these days.

The zoo announced its first successful hatching of a kea, a vulnerable New Zealand parrot, on Wednesday. Scarlet is still being cared for by zookeepers but will make a public debut soon, according to the zoo.

Her hatching grows the North American zoo kea population to 38 — 14 of which are female, according to the Denver Zoo.

Scarlet’s journey has been somewhat tumultuous so far. Kea hatchings are somewhat rare. Zookeepers designed a large nest box with a tunnel entrance that enticed Scarlet’s mother, Anna, to breed with her mate Sorento, resulting in four eggs.

The zookeepers had every intention of letting the parents-to-be incubate the eggs and rear the chicks themselves. Then tragedy struck.

The inexperienced parents broke two of the eggs, forcing zookeepers to remove the remaining two and incubate them artificially. Of those, Scarlet was the only one to hatch on Feb. 8. She is the first chick for both Anna and Sorento.

Zookeepers have been on hand rearing Scarlet and plan to return her to her parents when she’s old enough.

Currently a gray fluff ball, Scarlet will grow up to be olive-green with a reddish-orange coloring under her wings. Adult keas can grow to be 19-inches long and weigh two pounds.

Keas are one of the few alpine species of parrots and are mostly found in the mountains of the South Island of New Zealand. It’s hard to pin down the exact population in the wild, but experts estimate it to be between 3,000 and 5,000. The zoo warned that the actual number could be significantly lower.

The birds are classified as vulnerable by the International Union for Conservation of Nature. They face multiple threats, including human-animal conflict and predation by introduced species, such as stoats and possums.

Scarlet is the latest in a string of new babies at the zoo. was born Jan. 25. after a surprise pregnancy. No word yet on how Miso-Chi and Dobby are handling the newest challenger in the race for the “cutest baby animal” title.

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