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TheVoiceOfJoyce This NashVillager reports on everything from animal birthing at the Zoo to rising grocery prices. They’re thinking of giving seniors a tax holiday to making grocery shopping affordable. Good idea.

I love a loophole. 

As a health reporter, I write about shuttered rural hospitals, flu infection rates, public vaccine programming, access to contraceptives — things like that. But as a person, I like cute baby animals. 

Here is the loophole: When there is a birth at the zoo, a whole team has been caring for mom and baby. In the lead up, the staff is doing regular ultrasounds to see if development is going well. They make sure to be all hands on deck during and immediately after delivery. They ensure mom is eating enough food to breastfeed, that the baby is latching. That the pair is practicing safe sleep. 

It’s obstetrics and neonatology! Health topics! You’ve gotta send out the health reporter. 

This is how I’ve written about a baby elephant, a baby clouded leopard, and now… 

WHAT TO KNOW

Photo credit: Allyson Mao

The Nashville Zoo now has a baby aardvark in its care. 

There are so many things I didn’t know about aardvarks until I got to go meet some. 

Aardvarks are private. They are nocturnal and live in burrows, making them notoriously hard to study in the wild. We actually have no idea what the global population is. The Nashville team said seeing an aardvark on a safari would be a highly unlikely, “once-in-a-lifetime experience.” 

Aardvarks and anteaters look alike, since they both evolved adaptations to eat ants and termites. But they’re totally unrelated. On the animal kingdom’s big family tree, aardvarks are kind of out on their own. They’re the only surviving species under the Orycteropodidae order — a segment of African mammals.  

Nashville’s aardvarks don’t have a normal standing exhibit. They’d be asleep during most of the zoo’s hours and probably wouldn’t leave the indoors. So you can see them rarely: during presentations, or when caregivers take them on a leash walk. 

I could go on and on. But we’ll have a radio and streaming story (complete with sniffing and nursing sounds) and a longer article available next week, along with some video on social so follow along for more. 

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On today’s episode of the NashVillagerpodcast with host Nina Cardona 🎙️ 

Who was “Black Bob” Renfro? Robert Renfro came here as a slave shortly after the city was founded. But, he earned his freedom and won both the support of Nashville’s elite and multiple lawsuits. Plus the local news for January 16, 2026 and Rock Nashville. 

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