@kom.jes.rg.anh52: O poor

Kom jes rg anh😍
Kom jes rg anh😍
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Saturday 27 September 2025 03:58:00 GMT
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pov9793
Pov シ :
Cute mes beb🫩❤
2025-09-28 07:43:56
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hav.hav241
bong HaV :
ដូចតួជប៉ុន
2025-09-29 07:33:13
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kongkea066
Kong🙂 :
មិនស្មានថាលើលោកមានស្រីស្អាតម្លឹងសោះ❤❤❤
2025-11-08 06:55:27
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socialconsciousness41
មនុស្ស គ្មានតមៃ្ល :
គ្មានសំណាង♥️♥️♥️♥️🥰🥰🥰🥰
2025-11-24 14:41:50
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__sunpheara
Pheara.👨🏻 :
Men ei te o✨
2025-09-27 05:02:22
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prak.tharat
Prak tharat :
💐Telegram 💐
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phanhq34
Spider🕷️ :
Ai 😂
2025-09-27 13:48:14
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fong508
@កុកកម្សត់ស្នេហ៍🐔💔 :
2025-09-27 04:03:25
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panda.panda198
Panda :
បានត្រឹមមើល🫣🫣
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chea1133
Rith :
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🦖ŠMĘŸ BT🎄 :
Oun❤️
2025-11-26 03:59:35
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kirizame168
kirizame168 :
Idol nv tea amm🥺
2025-10-01 08:54:29
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jong.kok58
Seth :
som meta idol
2025-11-08 02:10:37
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reaksa.chan3
GR :
2025-10-25 09:33:35
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t320867
Thy :
😩
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alexheng_18
Alex Heng :
2025-09-27 03:59:15
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zinot40000
Anh nv km jng kab chat mk 🙄 :
2025-09-27 04:05:25
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brians8190
brians8 :
follback me please, i wanna give u a job🙏🏻
2025-09-28 04:28:49
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communitysigns
Ÿæñğ Ÿæǔý :
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idonotknowwhoareu7
REN :p :
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nor6 :
🥰
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bropanha6966
Bro Panha :
🥰
2025-11-25 03:43:40
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xp84994
D.PinG :
😭😭😭
2025-11-24 12:43:31
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naniolala619
Nani 619 :
🥰🥰🥰
2025-11-09 01:34:01
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channa3335
Chan 🦥ńä🎋 :
💖💖💖
2025-11-05 02:50:48
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Other Videos

Rescued Manatee eating lettuce. Ohio’s two inland manatee hubs—Columbus Zoo and Aquarium and the Cincinnati Zoo & Botanical Garden—anchor a small national network that rescues, rehabilitates, and returns Florida manatees to the wild under the Manatee Rescue & Rehabilitation Partnership (MRP). In this system, most animals are rescued and stabilized in Florida, then moved to “second-stage” centers like Columbus and Cincinnati to put on weight, heal fully, and build the stamina and behaviors needed for release. Importantly, they are not the only non-Florida participants today: the Georgia Aquarium also joined the MRP to provide secondary care capacity, expanding relief for crowded Florida hospitals and speeding the path to release.   Columbus operates Manatee Coast as a purpose-built rehabilitation habitat and has worked in the program since the late 1990s, often caring for multiple orphaned calves at once. A long-term resident, “Stubby,” is a non-releasable adult injured by a boat strike who has served as a calm surrogate presence for young manatees during rehab—one reason Columbus frequently receives difficult orphans and helps them transition to normal feeding and social patterns. In recent years, the zoo and its partners have coordinated large return flights to Florida as cohorts reach target size and health, followed by post-release monitoring in warm-water refuges.   Cincinnati’s Manatee Springs plays the same second-stage role: weeks to months of high-volume feeding, veterinary care, and quiet husbandry that turns thin, vulnerable calves into robust juveniles capable of life back in Florida waters. Like Columbus, Cincinnati coordinates closely with Florida acute-care hospitals (e.g., SeaWorld Orlando, ZooTampa) and with the MRP release committee, contributing to periodic multi-animal transports and tracked releases. Together—with added capacity at Georgia Aquarium—these Midwestern and Southeastern partners show how inland and out-of-state facilities meaningfully increase throughput in a species-saving pipeline: more beds for stabilized animals, faster turnover in Florida critical-care wards, and more manatees swimming free each year.
Rescued Manatee eating lettuce. Ohio’s two inland manatee hubs—Columbus Zoo and Aquarium and the Cincinnati Zoo & Botanical Garden—anchor a small national network that rescues, rehabilitates, and returns Florida manatees to the wild under the Manatee Rescue & Rehabilitation Partnership (MRP). In this system, most animals are rescued and stabilized in Florida, then moved to “second-stage” centers like Columbus and Cincinnati to put on weight, heal fully, and build the stamina and behaviors needed for release. Importantly, they are not the only non-Florida participants today: the Georgia Aquarium also joined the MRP to provide secondary care capacity, expanding relief for crowded Florida hospitals and speeding the path to release. Columbus operates Manatee Coast as a purpose-built rehabilitation habitat and has worked in the program since the late 1990s, often caring for multiple orphaned calves at once. A long-term resident, “Stubby,” is a non-releasable adult injured by a boat strike who has served as a calm surrogate presence for young manatees during rehab—one reason Columbus frequently receives difficult orphans and helps them transition to normal feeding and social patterns. In recent years, the zoo and its partners have coordinated large return flights to Florida as cohorts reach target size and health, followed by post-release monitoring in warm-water refuges. Cincinnati’s Manatee Springs plays the same second-stage role: weeks to months of high-volume feeding, veterinary care, and quiet husbandry that turns thin, vulnerable calves into robust juveniles capable of life back in Florida waters. Like Columbus, Cincinnati coordinates closely with Florida acute-care hospitals (e.g., SeaWorld Orlando, ZooTampa) and with the MRP release committee, contributing to periodic multi-animal transports and tracked releases. Together—with added capacity at Georgia Aquarium—these Midwestern and Southeastern partners show how inland and out-of-state facilities meaningfully increase throughput in a species-saving pipeline: more beds for stabilized animals, faster turnover in Florida critical-care wards, and more manatees swimming free each year.

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