Hello again. I've checked the records and Puan was born in 1953, making her 54 years old. When I was Publications Officer here a couple of years ago, I did a story on Where Are They Now? and featured Puluh. By 2005 he had fathered four young 'uns and had escaped in 2003 by climbing up onto the roof.
Thanks for the update! Glad to know Hsing is still alive despite his diabetes. His mom is somewhat of an institution here in Singapore.
Yup Hsing Hsing is the first born of "Ah Meng". She'll be turning 47 this June.
Zooish Yes, Sorry, Ah Meng, not Ah Meh. I have some postcards of her somewhere. 47 is a very good age too, presumably she is the oldest Orqangutan at Singapore?. How many young does she have in total? And do you nowadays keep your Bornean and Sumatran Orangs in seperate groupings- I think they used all to be all mixed together in the past.
melbourne has a gorilla, i think its betsy, that must be particuarly old by now.
from emeory she had her last baby in her 40's (no small feat by any account) and that was quite some time ago!!
i know chimps can live to be very old. anyone know how old the oldest orang in captivity made it to?
Unfortunately, her second born, a female, is a hybrid. She actually mated with a Bornean male through the bars of their adjoining cages!
That's not the only incident of that kind... Orangutans are quite good at it. AT Twycross Zoo UK, some years ago they had a pair of Borneans living next to a pair of Sumatrans. Both pairs regularly produced babies, but DNA testing much later revealed that the Sumatran female's young were hybrids from matings with the Bornean male through the dividing mesh! Her own Sumatran mate mated her too but it seems he was infertile. Those hybrid young were all sent to FRance and a thick plexiglass screen put up to cover the mesh.
I think I've even heard of Gorillas doing this too....![]()
patrick;12647 anyone know how old the oldest orang in captivity made it to?[/QUOTE said:I'm beginning to think Puan may be one of the oldest Orangutans living in a zoo anywhere. Few have ever made it over fifty.
Mawas was a Bornean who was born in January 1941. When she died in Dec. 1997, she was almost 57.