Tokyo Ueno Zoo, Tokyo, Japan - Panda Fund - dedicated to the conservation of giant panda and their habitats
Dedicated to the conservation of giant panda and their habitats   

Tokyo Ueno Zoo, Tokyo, Japan

2008-11-09

Tokyo Ueno Zoo, Tokyo, Japan - home to Ling Ling (M) who died on April 30, 2008

Name: Ling Ling,  (Chinese Giving Name: 陵陵) - died on April 30, 2008
Sex:      Male 
DOB:   September, 1985 in Beijing Zoo, China
 
The Ueno Zoo (Onshi Ueno Dobutsuen) is Japan's oldest and most famous zoo. It was opened on March 20, 1882. Its location, a five-minute walk from the Park Exit of Ueno Station, makes access from Tokyo's public-transportation network convenient. The Ueno Zoo Monorail, the first monorail in the country, connects the eastern and western parts of the grounds.

Tokyo Ueno Zoo

Ueno has most variety of species on exhibition than any other zoo in Japan, however, the most popular attraction in Ueno Zoo had been the giant panda Ling Ling for last 15 years since it arrived in 1992.  Sadly, the male Ling Ling, which was Ueno's only giant panda at the time, died of chronic heart failure on April 30, 2008, leaving Ueno Zoo without a panda for the first time since 1972.  China has agreed to lend a male and a female to Ueno. 
 
Ling Ling (September 1985 - April 30, 2008) was a male Chinese-born, giant panda who resided at the Ueno Zoo, the largest zoo in Tokyo, Japan. At the time of his death at the age of 22, Ling Ling was the only giant panda left at the Ueno Zoo and the oldest panda in Japan. He served as an important symbol of the Ueno Zoo and of friendship between Japan and China. Ling Ling, who was given to Japan in 1992, was the only giant panda in the country who was directly owned by Japan. There are eight other giant pandas in Japan as of April 2008, but they are all on loan to Japan from China.  Despite being a male panda, Ling Ling's name meant "darling little girl" in Chinese.
 
Ling Ling at Ueno Zoo in September 2007
 
Ling Ling was born at the Beijing Zoo in Beijing, China, in September 1985.  He was given to Japan and the Ueno Zoo in November 1992 by China in exchange for a panda that had been born in Japan. The 1992 panda exchange, between China and Japan, which is often called Panda diplomacy, took place to commemorate the 20th anniversary of the normalization of bilateral Sino-Japanese relations in 1972.  He remained one of the Ueno Zoo's most popular attractions for over 15 years.
 
The Ueno Zoo paired Ling Ling with a female panda named Tong Tong. The two pandas became mates, but were unable to breed successfully and produced no offspring. Tong Tong died in 2000, leaving Ling Ling as the only giant panda at the Ueno Zoo. The zoo had tried unsuccessfully to breed Ling Ling with other pandas since 2001 using artificial insemination.  Ling Ling was even sent out of Japan to Mexico three times in an attempt to mate him with other pandas.
 
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Photo by Koichi Kamoshida/Getty Images Ling Ling was the star attraction at Ueno zoo, where crowds of fans flocked to see the country's oldest and best-loved panda

Ling Ling's health began to deteriorate in August 2007 due to old age, with symptoms such as loss of strength and appetite.  He had been on medication since September 2007 for his ailments, which included heart and kidney problems.  He was removed from public display at the zoo on April 29, 2008, at the beginning of the zoo's Golden Week holiday season. The zoo explained that Ling Ling would be removed from display in order to undergo intensive care treatments.
 
Despite the treatments, Ling Ling died at the Ueno Zoo at approximately 2am on April 30, 2008, just one day after he was withdrawn from public exhibition.  An autopsy found that he had died of heart failure. He was 22 years and seven months old, which is roughly equivalent to 70 years old for a human.  According to the Ueno Zoo, Ling Ling was the oldest panda in Japan, as well as the fifth oldest known captive male panda in the world at the time of his death.  Ling Ling's portrait and favorite food, bamboo shoots, were displayed in his cage following his death. Zoo visitors left bouquets of flowers and signed condolence registers.
 
Below: Children pray in front of the panda cage at the zoo on Wednesday after learning about Ling Ling's death. COURTESY OF UENO ZOOLOGICAL GARDENS
News photo
Ling Ling's death left the Ueno Zoo without a resident giant panda for the first time in 36 years, since October 1972 when two pandas, Kang Kang and Lan Lan, were given to the zoo to mark the normalization of bilateral relations between Japan and China. The Ueno Zoo reportedly fears a drop in its number of visitors due to the loss of Ling Ling.  Approximately 3.5 million people visit the Ueno Zoo each year, including about 40,000 people per day on holidays and weekends.  However, many visitors came specifically to see Ling Ling and other panda related attractions.  Without Ling Ling, or another giant panda to replace him, the zoo fears that it may be unable to maintain current visitor numbers without the pandas.  The Ueno Zoo is reportedly consulting the Japanese Foreign Ministry about obtaining a new panda from China.
 
Ling Ling was the only giant panda in Japan that was directly owned by the government or a Japanese institution.  There are still eight other pandas located throughout Japan.  However, each of these remaining eight pandas are currently on loan from China and are not Japanese owned. Six of the Chinese pandas are currently housed at Adventure World, which is located in Shirahamacho, Wakayama Prefecture, while two other pandas resident at the Kobe Municipal Oji Zoo in Kobe, Japan.
 
Japanese Prime Minister Yasuo Fukuda asked Chinese President Hu Jintao for two more pandas following Ling Ling's death.
 
Ling Ling's death in April 2008 marked the second high profile death of an "elderly" captive panda in less than one month. On April 2, 2008, Taotao, the oldest giant panda in captivity in China, also died at the Jinan Zoo at the age of 36.
 
 
More information on Ueno Zoo:
上野動物園
〒110-8711 台東区上野公園9-83 
TEL:03-3828-5171(代)
http://www.tokyo-zoo.net/index.html
http://www.tokyo-zoo.net/english/ueno/main.html
 
 
 
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