Ueno Zoo Tokyo - Ueno Zoo

markun

Well-Known Member
This link has some basic info on the zoo in English.

Ueno is in in the north of Tokyo near a large station for trains to N.E. Japan. The park has museums and galleries as well as the zoo split into two sections.

Here's a map

The map is quite descriptive so I'll just talk about the highlights. The zoo had pandas when I visited, the enclosure isn't that interesting with a glass fronted tiled indoor area and a nicely planted but small outside enclosure. Red pandas are nearby.

The Sumatran tigers and gorillas have the best enclosures which are aesthetically pleasing at least quite green and relatively densely planted with various viewing points. Certainly I remember with the gorillas you feel they aren't just plonked in front of you. Not sure about enrichment but compared with many zoo experiences in Japan, it's not bad as a zoo experience.

Dholes are also here in a moated enclosure with a grotto-ish background which isn't huge but nicely planted and looks nice.

There's a nocturnal house where I may or may not have seen a kiwi!

Polar bears have a typical grotto but other bears have small but slightly more interesting enclosures than is the norm in Japan.

The Asian elephant enclosure is unremarkable.

The other half of the zoo has shoebill storks (first time I'd seen them) in a netted aviary next to flamingos.

The African area here is a row of ungulate enclosures including okapi, zebra and barbary sheep in high-fenced pens, not very attractive. Possibly the most bizarre in appearance is the hippo enclosure - it looks like an old-style polar bear or seal enclosure, all concrete and swimming pool looking.

There are steller's sea eagles on an island on a big lake which is interesting. Like Nagoya, Ueno feels like it has a lot of concrete and lots of wide open spaces. It isn't an awful place but just doesn't feel like a pleasant place to wander around, certainly no sense of immersion but perhaps the tiger and gorilla areas point towards the future.
 
I will be in Tokyo next may,of course I will visit some mor cities in japan to see some zoos and espeiclaly a few of the big aquriums. On my way home, I will do a stopover in taiwan for Taipeh Zoo and two aquariums.

As far as I know, Ueno is keeping two species of tarisiers and chinese pangolin.
 
Pandas headed for Tokyo zoo
27 July 2010 - A pair of Chinese giant pandas are soon headed for Tokyo's Ueno Zoo, where the fluffy bamboo eaters are set to delight the crowds from early next year.

The Tokyo metropolitan government, which runs the zoo, this week finalised a deal under which it will pay a giant price tag of almost a million dollars a year (S$1.4 million) for the next decade to keep the animals.

The money is to be spent on wild animal protection in China.

The zoo will ask the Japanese public to nickname the two pandas, a 143kg male and 124kg female, media reports said.

An extension of the lease can be negotiated, a Tokyo official said, and the zoo can keep babies born to the pair for the first two years, although China retains their ownership.

The crowd-pleasers are expected to boost attendance at the zoo, which attracted three million visitors last year, down from a peak of more than seven million in the mid-1970s.
 
A face only a mother could love? Baby pygmy hippopotamus gets nuzzle from proud parent | Mail Online
25 July 2011

It seems unlikely that this hippo would win any kind of award for the world's cutest animal.

But this mother didn't seem to care as she snuggled up to her newborn child who has become a star attraction in Japan.

The pygmy hippopotamus was born a month ago on June 24 at the Ueno Zoo in Tokyo and is one of only a handful around the world.

When the cuddle with Mum was the done the pygmy hippo decided it was bath time. He hopped into a small pool in his enclosure for a quick wash.

After a good clean he returned to his, nuzzling his own nose against her hind leg as she walked in front of him.

Hippos have become so rare that they are often referred to as 'living fossils'.

They are normally found in western Africa and weigh in at between 160 and 270kg. When this baby becomes an adult it is likely to be around 6ft long..

This compares with a normal hippo who can weigh up to five tons and grow to more than five metres in length.

The pygmy's diet consists of a variety of ferns and broad-leaved plants, as well as grasses and fruits found in dense rain forests.

The animals are endangered because of the destruction of their habitat and due to poaching for their teeth, which contain ivory.

The baby's home at the Ueno Zoo in central Tokyo is the oldest zoo in Japan and has been established since the 1880s.

It zoo is now home to more than 2,600 animals from 464 different species, with many coming from abroad, including the first giant pandas during 1972.

It also has a legacy of breeding baby hippos - with others being born in 2001.
as might be guessed from the text there are photos on the link, and the baby hippo is very cute so worth a look :)
 
Excellent news, proving that sometimes we can expect ele births well away from the mid 20-25 age region!!!
 
In mid-December a male Aye-aye was born, meaning that Ueno now holds 10 (5.5) of these lemurs.
 
Born to parents Haoko x Momoko (34), her 5th offspring. Currently 8 individuals in total.
Any more info on the other gorillas or their breeding stats?
 
Born to parents Haoko x Momoko (34), her 5th offspring. Currently 8 individuals in total.
Any more info on the other gorillas or their breeding stats?

Haoko group, living in 1st Enclosure, has 3 wives (Momoko, Toto & Nana) but Nana is hand-raised and has no mating behavior with Haoko. Toto has regularly, but has never become pregnant. I think Toto has some gynecology problem (Ueno doesn't seem to have ever investigated it). One more female named Piko (age 46), lives in 2nd enclosure alone.
 
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