Английская Википедия:Chi Chi (giant panda)

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Файл:Chi Chi, Giant Panda, London Zoo, Camden, taken 1967 - geograph.org.uk - 738608.jpg
Chi Chi at London Zoo, September 1967

Chi Chi (Шаблон:Zh; September 1954 – 22 July 1972) was a well-known female giant panda at London Zoo in England.[1]

Chi Chi was not London Zoo's first giant panda; Ming was one of four that arrived in 1938. However, it was Chi Chi who became the Zoo's star attraction and England's best-loved zoo animal.[2]

Chi Chi is now a stuffed exhibit at the Natural History Museum in London.

Life

Chi Chi was born in the wild in Sichuan, China. She was caught in May 1955 in Baoxing, Sichuan, and moved to the Beijing Zoo in June. In May 1957, Kliment Voroshilov made a request for a panda for the Moscow Zoo during his visit to China, and she was sent to Moscow with another panda in the same month. However, the attempts to mate them were unsuccessful due to sexual imprinting as a result of being reared by human keepers.[3][4] The Russians suspected that both pandas were male, and as a result, the Soviets returned Chi Chi to China in exchange for another panda in January 1958.[2] In May of the same year, the Austrian animal broker, Heini Demmer, acquired Chi Chi from Beijing Zoo in exchange for an impressive collection of African hoofstock and brought the animal back to Moscow Zoo. After resting for a week, the panda journeyed to Tierpark Berlin, the zoo in East Berlin. By then, Chi Chi had already been sold to Brookfield Zoo in Illinois, United States. However, the Treasury Department stepped in and announced that the US trade embargo on goods from China extended even to pandas.[5] Chi Chi was thus refused entry to the US.

The Frankfurt Zoological Garden provided a temporary home for the panda until Demmer decided to temporarily hire the animal out to European zoos. She then visited Copenhagen Zoo before she arrived at London Zoo on 5 September 1958. The Zoological Society of London had stated that it would not encourage collection of wild pandas, but accepted Chi Chi since she had already been collected. Although Chi Chi's visit was originally planned to last for only three weeks, it was decided to buy her for £12,000. Chi Chi became property of London Zoo on 26 September 1958.[6] Around this time, photographer Stanley Long created a series of stereoscopic 3D views of Chi Chi for the VistaScreen publishing company.[7]

Файл:ChiChiPandaNHM.jpg
Stuffed remains at the Natural History Museum in London

Chi Chi was an inspiration for Sir Peter Scott's simple but distinctive logo design for the World Wildlife Fund.[8][9] However, the organization's current logo is not the logo designed by Peter Scott but a later one, designed for WWF in 1986 when it changed its name from World Wildlife Fund to World Wide Fund for Nature.[10] Chi Chi died at London Zoo on 22 July 1972[11] and was mourned by the nation.[2] A post mortem was conducted. Her remains, now a stuffed exhibit, sit in a glass case, at London's Natural History Museum.[12]

See also

References

Шаблон:Reflist

Шаблон:Famous giant pandas

  1. Michael R. Brambell, London Zoo's Giant panda: Ailuropoda melatiolenca: 'Chi Chi', 1957–1972. International Zoo Yearbook, Volume 14, Issue 1, pp. 163–164. Published online 18 December 2007. The Zoological Society of London, 1985. Шаблон:Doi.
  2. 2,0 2,1 2,2 Шаблон:Cite web
  3. Nicholls, Henry (2011). The Way of the Panda: The Curious History of China's Political Animal. Open Road Media, Шаблон:ISBN
  4. Dobbin, Muriel (24 April 1975). D.C. zoo encourages giant pandas to observe nation's birth with own. The Baltimore Sun
  5. Шаблон:Cite journal
  6. Ramona Morris & Desmond Morris: The Giant Panda. Revised edition by Jonathan Barzdo. Papermac, London 1981, pp. 93–111, Шаблон:ISBN
  7. Шаблон:Cite web
  8. Шаблон:Cite book
  9. WWF: Giant Panda
  10. Шаблон:Cite web
  11. Gwynne Vevers: London's Zoo. London 1976, p. 99, Шаблон:ISBN
  12. Шаблон:Cite book