Kobe Oji Zoo Kobe Zoo

markun

Well-Known Member
Kobe (Oji park ) zoo is in an urban park with a small funfair attached. They have giant pandas and in 2003 when I went there was quite a lot of panda mania in the city. (This seems to be a big thing in Japan, people love exotic species. The students in my school went to Zoorasia and came back obsessed with okapis and things like sea otters and belugas often feature in cartoons and advertising campaigns).

The pandas have a semi-circular enclosure which isn’t very exciting but is open and fairly well planted and the pandas are often visible and active. The nearby bear enclosures are depressing barred shoe boxes with enormous brown bears in a tiny cage.

Hippos and white rhinos have ok enclosures with a large deep pool for the hippos (but not much room on land) and reasonable and naturalistic landscaping which isn’t that common in Japan. Nearby is a dreary row of pens with single or pairs of deer or antelope (I can’t remember exactly – I think the map says Sitatunga), kangaroos, ostriches and a pen with very high fences for giraffes. Not very attractive.

Asian elephants have a traditional small and old-looking enclosure. There is a round house with sandy glass fronted enclosures for big cats - lions, amur tiger, jaguar, leopard, snow leopard - with rocky backgrounds. Sea lions and polar bears had underwater viewing, the polar bears doing better than the other bears but still a fairly traditional polar bear enclosure.

There’s a museum or science centre which also included king penguins in a white tiled enclosure that wasn’t very inspiring.

I can’t remebr much about the primates but they have gorillas, chimps, orang utans and gibbons. I seem to remember an enclosure for gorillas or chimps which was somewhat like Edinburgh's old chimp enclosure with a similar viewing corridor.

There’s a newer rather twee childrens zoo area which is a bit Disney on a budget where you’ll find squirrels, red pandas, otters and the koala house which is a modern building like a barn with glass fronted enclosures consisting of a sandy floor with branches. There’s an outdoor enclosure too. Some aiviaries dotted around and pens for storks and cranes too.

So in brief, a fairly traditional zoo, compact, not very big, you could see it in half a day, no enclosures which will make you go wow, with all the picture book animals. I also remember pallas cats and giant anteaters.
 
Oji Zoo is now investigating the cause. They say "it might be because the baby couldn't have enough milk, or tampled which are the major causes of death of newborn pandas".
Sad anyways.....
 
There is a theory that if the cub had been born with another companion, that the mother would abandon one and look after the stronger one, I'm having trouble getting on to many sites at the moment had this panda given birth before?
 
China poised to sue Japan for compensation over dead panda - Telegraph
Experts in China claim that the death of the panda, which happened during a routine operation last week, was the result of the animal being given too much sedative.

China's government has announced it is sending a panel of experts to investigate the death of Xing Xing, a 14-year-old male, who suffered a suspected heart attack.

The State Forestry Administration, which leases Panda's to foreign countries for US$1m a year, has ordered that the corpse be sealed until the inspection team arrives at Oji Zoo in the western port city of Kobe to determine the exact cause of death, China's state media reported.

Xing Xing, who had been on loan to the zoo since 2002, had recently been granted another five years in Japan after the two countries agreed to extend a 10-year loan deal.

Workers at Kobe zoo have been trying unsuccessfully to breed from Xing Xing and with his mate Tan Tan, who delivered a stillborn cub in 2007 and a live cub the following years who died within days of its birth. It was during an operation to collect semen from Xing Xing that the panda died.

According to the China Wildlife Conservation Association, a breeding agreement with Japan includes a stipulation for $500,000 in compensation should a panda die, Shanghai's Oriental Morning Post reported.

The death comes at an unfortunate moment in China-Japan relations as the two nations remain at loggerheads over the arrest of a Chinese trawler captain by the Japanese coastguard last week, an incident that has provoked increasingly testy diplomatic exchanges.

During more cordial times, China's has used pandas to improve its often rocky relations with its wartime enemy.

In May 2008 China's president Hu Jintao announced the loan of two pandas to Japan, reprising a practice that dates back to the Tang Dynasty, when the 7th century Empress Wu Zetian sent a pair of pandas to the Japanese emperor.

At the time, days after the death (by natural causes) of Japan's eldest panda Ling Ling, President Hu observed that "Giant pandas are very popular among the Japanese, and they are a symbol of the friendly ties between Japan and China."

China's internet was a whirl with conspiracy theories and yesterday a post on one of the country's leading internet portals said: "The Panda died just one day right after Japan arrested the Chinese fishing boat captain, right?"

"Before that it has been living safely in Japan for ten years. Is the Panda's death really a coincidence? Furthermore, it died of sperm extraction operation isn't it a way the Japanese trying to insult Chinese?"

There are just 1,600 pandas left in the wild. Nearly 300 others are in captive-breeding programmes worldwide, mainly in China.
(Xing Xing is the same panda as Kou Kou referred to in Nisha's post above)
 
Xing Xing = Long Long = Ko Ko = Kou Kou and the female panda is known as Tan Tan, Shuan Shuan and Dan Dan.
 
Kobe Oji has currently an Amur leopard pair: Pon-chan 0,1 (Pong) and Amuro 1,0
Pong was born in Hiroshima on 12.11.2008 and Amuro 5.5.2010 in Novosibirsk.
 
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Because gorillas are extremely rate in Japanese zoos, the empty gorilla enclosure is filled with gorilla cutouts.

Maybe the AZA or the Australian ZAA could give some surplus males since primates cannot be imported to Japan from the EU.
 
Because gorillas are extremely rate in Japanese zoos, the empty gorilla enclosure is filled with gorilla cutouts.

Maybe the AZA or the Australian ZAA could give some surplus males since primates cannot be imported to Japan from the EU.

I thought I could have done a better job at demonstrating the new gorilla enclosure so I decided to share a image and a news footage on the enclosure.

one could say that this is for the best but I'd call this sad


20210929-2.jpeg
 
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