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Panda on loan from China dies in Thai zoo

Staff at Chiang Mai Zoo said they found no sign of illness or injury on 19-year-old Chuang Chuang’s body.

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Chuang Chuang

Zoo staff in northern Thailand donned black and white clothing and observed a minute of silence to mourn the sudden death of a popular giant panda who was on a long-term loan from China.

Chuang Chuang collapsed on Monday in his enclosure shortly after standing up following a meal of bamboo leaves, said Wutthichai Muangmun, director of Chiang Mai Zoo.

Speaking at a news conference on Tuesday, zoo staff said they found no sign of illness or injury on the 19-year-old panda’s body, and he had recently passed a health check-up.

Kannikar Nimtrakul, the zoo vet who oversees the panda enclosure, said the animals have a life expectancy of 14-20 years.

Thailand Panda
Chuang Chuang in his enclosure at Chiang Mai Zoo (Apichart Weerawong/AP)

Chuang Chuang and his female mate, Lin Hui, arrived in Chiang Mai in 2003 on a 10-year loan that was later extended for another 10 years.

While the loan was ostensibly for research and conservation purposes, it was generally regarded as an act of friendship by China, which has sent pandas to many countries.

The two pandas proved a huge hit with Thais. For three years, a dedicated 24-hour TV channel broadcast their daily lives.

A scheme to encourage Chuang Chuang to mate by showing him videos of pandas getting intimate made headlines in 2007. The couple did produce a baby, Lin Ping, in 2009, though this was done through artificial insemination.

The zoo said around 15 million visitors have come to see the panda family in the past 16 years, generating 295 million baht (about £7.7 million) in income.

It may take some time until the cause of Chuang Chuang’s death is known.

Under an agreement between the zoo and the Chinese government’s panda conservation project, a post-mortem cannot be performed until a Chinese expert is present.

The zoo is organising commemorative activities for Chuang Chuang, and all staff have been ordered to wear black or white clothing for a period of mourning.

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