Smithsonian National Zoo Smithsonian National Zoo News 2015

Don't worry, around us you have nothing to be nervous of.

And BTW, we accept all views here on zoochat as long as they are respecful. I know you are pro-zoo but am just saying.
 
Well after all the panda and sea lion news there's also this

Man tries to enter National Zoo lions’ den

WASHINGTON — A man is undergoing a psychiatric evaluation after he tried to get into the lions’ den at the National Zoo earlier this week.

The man was trying to climb a fence near the exhibit when zoo police found him Wednesday afternoon.

The zoo says he made it over one barrier, but never actually made it into the lions’ den.

The National Zoo says the D.C. police took the man into custody and took him to a psychiatric emergency facility.

Man tries to enter National Zoo lions' den - WTOP
 
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I found these 2 photo galleries and I thought I would post the links here in case some people wanted to see I don't know if I can post these but If I can't i'll remove them.

Trip to National Zoo, Washington DC, April 2001

Main Webpage/Pictures/Former Life/Misc/National Zoo

I also found this video of the zoo in August 1990 that I thought i'll post and once again i'll remove it if i'm not allowed to post this.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Tk35W_ztrnY

I think I posted this before but I can't remember
 
National Zoo's Growing Panda Cub Weighs Nearly a Pound

See panda grow! The National Zoo's giant panda cub has nearly tripled his weight since his birth two weeks ago.

On Saturday, vets got the chance to perform a quick checkup when the newborn's mama, Mei Xiang, left the den to eat and drink. The cub weighed in at 409.6 grams (14.4 ounces) -- 119 grams more than he'd weighed just three days earlier.
The cub had weighed just 138 grams, or less than five ounces, shortly after birth.
Vets said he appeared to be healthy, and his heart and lungs sounded normal. The cub had a full belly at the time of the exam.

His eyes are still closed, which is normal. Cubs' eyes usually open when they are six to eight weeks old, the zoo said.

The cub was born Aug. 22, along with a twin brother. Unfortunately, the other cub -- the smaller of the two -- died four days later. Zookeepers had been swapping them out to ensure that both got time and attention from Mei Xiang, as is protocol with twin panda births. Giant panda mothers are typically unable to care for twin cubs on their own.

Both cubs were fathered by the zoo's male giant panda, Tian Tian.

Panda cubs are traditionally named at 100 days of age.

National Zoo's Growing Panda Cub Weighs Nearly a Pound | NBC4 Washington
 
We should name the giant panda cub after Elvis Presley. Here’s why.

On Dec. 21, 1970, Elvis Presley visited Richard Nixon in the Oval Office. On Feb. 21, 1972, President Nixon visited China. On April 16, 1972, two giant pandas — Ling-Ling and Hsing-Hsing — arrived at the National Zoo in Washington.

That, my friends, is what we call cause and effect: a straight line from Elvis to Nixon, from Nixon to the pandas.

We must continue that line, completing the circle: from the pandas back to Elvis. We must name the National Zoo’s new panda cub after the King of Rock and Roll.

The photo of Elvis Presley shaking hands with Richard Nixon is one of the most striking images in modern U.S. history, the very embodiment of incongruity. It began with a restless Elvis flying from Memphis to Washington, then to Los Angeles before deciding to head back east.

Writer Peter Carlson recounted the curious meeting in a 2010 article in Smithsonian magazine: “Elvis was traveling with some guns and his collection of police badges, and he decided that what he really wanted was a badge from the federal Bureau of Narcotics and Dangerous Drugs back in Washington. ‘The narc badge represented some kind of ultimate power to him,’ Priscilla Presley wrote in her memoir, ‘Elvis and Me.’ ‘With the federal narcotics badge, he [believed he] could legally enter any country both wearing guns and carrying any drugs he wished.’ ”

Elvis Presley was a fan of panda bears. In 1957 at Graceland, he posed with Mary Kosloski, 8, of the March of Dimes surrounded by stuffed pandas that were auctioned off for charity. (Courtesy of Elvis Presley Enterprises/Courtesy of Elvis Presley Enterprises)
Aboard the flight, Elvis wrote a note to Nixon decrying the drug culture and “hippie elements” that were threatening the nation. He offered to help combat them. “I will be [in Washington] for as long as it takes to get the credentials of a Federal Agent,” he wrote. “I have done an in-depth study of drug abuse and Communist brainwashing techniques and I am right in the middle of the whole thing where I can and will do the most good.”

After the plane landed, Elvis delivered the note to the White House. Six hours later — clad in a purple velvet suit, a massive belt buckle and a shirt collar as big as a nurse’s wimple — he was ushered into the Oval Office.

When Elvis left the building, he had his badge, the ostensible purpose of his visit.

But what if there was more to that meeting? What if the narc badge was just a cover for Elvis’s true reason for visiting Nixon: to formally request the importation from China of a giant panda?

Scoff if you will, but Elvis had a well-chronicled connection to pandas. In 1956, after cutting “Hound Dog” and “Don’t Be Cruel” in a Manhattan recording studio, the singer took the train from New York to Memphis. Photographer Al Wertheimer accompanied him.

The train ride was a butt-numbing 27 hours long. Elvis killed time listening to acetates of his recordings on a small portable record player. Then someone in his entourage produced a gigantic stuffed panda. It became an ice-breaking prop as Elvis walked through the train’s carriages, flirting with girls along the way. Wertheimer snapped photo after photo of Elvis: Here is the panda perched on Elvis’s hip like a toddler. Here it is sitting next to him. Here it is stuffed in an overhead luggage rack.

At one point, two teenagers said they didn’t believe Elvis really was who he said he was.

“See that photographer over there?” he asked. “Would he be taking my picture if I wasn’t Elvis Presley?”

The rich black-and-white images Wertheimer captured are striking. It’s hard to decide who’s cuter: the fuzzy panda or the nascent heartthrob. (Just search online for the images.)

Elvis was to have another interaction with pandas of the stuffed variety. In December 1957, he had a “date” with 8-year-old Mary Kosloski, the national March of Dimes poster girl. A photograph exists of Elvis and Mary sitting on the stairs at Graceland surrounded by . . . stuffed pandas. The plush toys were purchased by Elvis to be auctioned as a fundraiser for the National Foundation for Infantile Paralysis.

Elvis may have sung about teddy bears, but he obviously had a thing for panda bears. (He also had a dead twin, just like the new panda.)

In their day, Richard Nixon and Elvis Presley were polarizing figures. Their legacies are controversial. But we must not forget that one brought us unforgettable music. The other opened the door to China. Together, they brought us giant pandas. Let us honor that legacy. Let us name the new panda “Elvis.”

https://www.washingtonpost.com/loca...1c2ffa-58a1-11e5-b8c9-944725fcd3b9_story.html

Okay then John Kelly... you be you.
 
There’s a new gal in town on American Trail! North American beaver Chloe is 9 years old and is recommended to breed with the Zoo’s males, Chipper and Birch. The three of them met for the first time yesterday. Keepers say they’re a bit wary of each other, but based on previous introductions, all beavers should be comfortable interacting with one another in 3 or 4 days. On the other hand, Chloe warmed up to the keepers right away and has an endearing calm, confident personality. Planning a visit to the Zoo? Check out Chloe, Chipper, and Birch every day after 3 p.m.

Zoos facebook

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National Zoo’s giant panda cub is growing, weighing nearly two pounds

babypanda.jpeg


He’s growing! And he is starting to look more like a panda, with black-and-white markings.

The 4-week-old giant panda cub at the Smithsonian’s National Zoo weighs almost two pounds, officials said. That brings him to roughly eight times his birth weight. He was born Aug. 22 to dad Tian Tian and mother Mei Xiang. His twin died four days after being born after inhaling some food product, which led to pneumonia. Zookeepers had an intense six hour effort to try to save the cub.

In April, Mei Xiang was artificially inseminated twice. Once with semen from Tian Tian and from a male at a research center in Wolong, China.

National Zoo’s giant panda cub is growing, weighing nearly two pounds - The Washington Post
 
Ok, we get it. National Zoo has a panda cub.

Is there some suggestion National Zoo might have a panda cub? :eek:

You would have thought at least one person might have posted *something* about it........






:D
 
I understand this isn't the happiest of topics but for anyone that is interested I found this article from the Washington Post back in 2003 about the deaths of animals from the late 1990's and early 2000's aka the dark period in the national zoos history.

washingtonpost.com: '+title+'
 
Smithsonian's National Zoo and Conservation Biology Institute receives $4.5 million to continue Giant Panda program

David M. Rubenstein has pledged a second $4.5 million gift to the Smithsonian's National Zoo and Conservation Biology Institute, funding its giant panda research and conservation program through the end of 2020. The gift will support conservation efforts in China, research on giant panda reproduction, professional training programs, upgrades to the giant panda habitat at the National Zoo, care for the pandas living at the National Zoo and continue public education about the species and conservation.

Press Release - National Zoo| FONZ



David M. Rubenstein has pledged a second $4.5 million gift to support our giant panda conservation and research program through the end of 2020. As a result, our scientists will be able to continue all the research they do related to giant pandas and the other species that share their habitat.

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