By

Caitlin A. Johnson /

CBS/ February 11, 2009, 4:24 PM

Move Over Knut, Here Comes A Baby Hippo

There is some competition for the Berlin Zoo's main attraction, Knut the orphaned polar bear. He has grown up since first capturing the public's attention and isn't as cute as he used to be.

The zoo has just received a new baby — this one a pygmy hippo named Paul.

Now 6-months-old, Knut's keepers acknowledge they have over-indulged the polar bear. They say he is overweight and has to cut back on croissants and extra portions of fish, reports CBS News correspondent Shelia MacVicar.

According to the European Broadcast Union, Paul the hippo was born May 17 and zookeepers are hoping that he will draw attention away from Knut, who now is big enough to severely harm his caretakers.

But caretaker Uwe Fritzmann told the EBU that hippos can be difficult to raise.

"They don't get along with each other," he said. "So you can't keep them in large groups but mostly only on their own. Not every zoo wants to deal with that."

Knut also had an interesting childhood. He was raised by keepers after being abandoned by his mother. His daily romps with the keeper who hand-raised him were a huge and money-making attraction — more than 1 million people have come to the zoo to see him.

A true child star, he has spawned fan clubs and a whole line of merchandising. But like all child stars, Knut grew and grew, testing his teeth and his paws, until finally it became too dangerous to play.

Now one inadvertent swipe could badly maul his devoted keeper. But even as Knut grows up, and the crowds are not quite so entranced with a growing bear, Berlin is hoping they have a new child star in Paul.
Copyright 2009 CBS. All rights reserved.
8 Comments Add a Comment
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karenvs-2009 says:
Precious Knut's favorite time of day is his snuggle time with his "daddy or uncles", the role his beloved keepers still cherish also. Polar bears raised in zoos as abandoned cubs often remain on loving gentle terms with their keepers throughout their adult years. They do not maul their mothers in the wild and consider the keepers to be their mom. Check out Peace, the lovely bear raised in a Japanese zoo. Also, scientific studies featured in videos such as NOVA's IN THE LAND OF THE POLAR BEARS and POLAR BEAR ARCTIC ODYSSEY bring to light the intelligence, curiosity and majesty of these beautiful creatures. There is an instincitive bonding attraction between man and polar bear. Do check them out. They are very gentle for the most part and only attack when provoked or harassed. And they rarely kill or eat people. Churchill Manitoba has had only two fatalities since 1717 and the bears were not at fault! Do respect and support protection for these beautiful and beloved creatures.
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rushlimpdrug says:
"He has grown up since first capturing the public's attention and isn't as cute as he used to be."

My life is now complete.
Thank you CBs

to zoo:
bears are cute when they are cubs, when they stop being cute they make great rugs.
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catcher722 says:
Its not bashing, its just a statement about the truth, it never said he mauled anyone or that he even would do it, it just says if the event did happen, that it basically could cause major injuries.
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walt1944-2009 says:
I would rather see Knut wandering the White House hallways, than Karl Rove!
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dalerika says:
Absolutely Rubbish. CBS News gathers their sources from the European Tabloids? Obviously. Knut receives many private guests and they don't chain him up. He hasn't mauled any of them to death yet. He's growing everyday as a normal Polar Bear cub does. No need to bash him for growing into a healthy animal. Knut's happy. With or without the celebrity status.
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carlylaine says:
DeborahCox05

And you believe that garbage...gullible I guess.
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mnelsonix says:
Where is a picture of the baby pygmy hippo?
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deborahcox05 says:
I think he is still precious! And with the melting of the polar ice caps being such a "hot" topic, he may save his species one day from extinction.
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