Giant
Panda (Ailuropoda melanoleuca)
In
2011, when Ueno Zoo in Tokyo received two new
pandas from China ,
“Ri-ri” and “Shin-shin”, the predominantly Tokyo-based news media made a great fuss. It had been 3 years since the previous resident
panda Rin-rin had died at the age of 22 years, and the Tokyo media decided to
go into hype-up overdrive. On the day that Ri-ri and Shin-shin were first
publicly displayed, it was even reported that some enthusiastic panda fans had been
standing in line from the previous day.
Watching the young television news announcers become giddy and excited
about seeing a panda for the first time, I thought that the circus in Tokyo was ridiculously comic because there were already
pandas living at Adventure World in Wakayama
and at Kobe Oji Zoo in Hyogo. If anyone
had really wanted to see a panda that desperately, all they had to do was buy a
Shinkansen train ticket and come west.
Since
January 12 (Monday) was the “Coming of Age Day” holiday in Japan , I took
advantage of the day off to visit “Tan Tan” (female), the resident panda at
Kobe Oji Zoo. Tan Tan was born at a
panda research facility in China
on September 16, 1995, and will turn twenty years old this year. Although Japanese young people are deemed to “come
of age” and become adults when they reach the age of 20, pandas of that age are
considered to be senior citizens. Pandas
in the wild are thought to have an average life span of 15 years. And while pandas in captivity frequently live
into their 20’s, they rarely reach 30.
Tan Tan lunching on bamboo leaves:
Here
is a video version:
Food and Souvenirs
For
Panda lovers, a vendor in Kobe Oji Zoo offers panda-shaped Chinese pork buns
for 250 yen each.
As
for a gift or souvenir, the cute plush panda below was 1300 yen.
And
last of all, a photo of the Red Panda (Ailurus fulgens styani). Not related to the Giant Panda, but since it’s
such a cutie, I thought I’d include a photo.
Very
cute.
(Note:
All photos taken in this post were taken during a visit on January 12, 2015. The comments in this post are based on
observations made on that day.
Conditions may have since changed.
Please check it out for yourself!)