Joke Collection Website - Bulletin headlines - Japan raised pandas to death. How do foreign countries evaluate them?

Japan raised pandas to death. How do foreign countries evaluate them?

Evaluation:

Many foreign netizens condemned the irresponsible behavior of the breeder and the poor management of the zoo. Such breeders should be dismissed and are not qualified to keep animals.

As we all know, the giant panda is an endangered species endemic to China. It is a national first-class protected animal in China and listed as the flagship species of biodiversity protection in the world. The pandas rented from China, no matter where they go, can almost arouse the local people's high viewing craze, which shows that pandas have a strong influence not only in China, but also all over the world!

Xing Xing, a giant panda who died suddenly on 20 10, actually went to Japan as "body double" in 2002. In 2008, the zoo successfully bred a giant panda cub through artificial insemination, but died unfortunately three days after birth. According to the relevant agreements signed between China and Japan, pandas "leased" to Japan and pandas born in Japan are owned by China and will be returned to China after a certain period of time.

Extended data:

What happened:

Xing Xing was sent to Prince Zoo from China in 2002. In addition to Xing Xing, Prince Zoo also keeps female panda Dandan, who is 14 years old this year. The zoo collected Xing Xing's sperm after finding the signs of Dandan's estrus. On September 9th, 20 10, the municipal government of Kobe, Japan, announced that Xing Xing, a 4-year-old male giant panda, who was kept in the Prince Zoo in Kobe, died suddenly during artificial sperm collection anesthesia.

201September 10, the International Cooperation Office of China Wild Giant Panda Conservation Association responded that the State Forestry Administration and China Wild Giant Panda Conservation Association attached great importance to it, held an emergency meeting and sent a three-member expert group to Japan to investigate the cause of death of giant pandas.

The expert group is composed of Tang Chunxiang, Assistant Director of China Giant Panda Conservation Research Center, Professor of Animal Pathology Department of Sichuan Agricultural University and representatives of China Wild Giant Panda Conservation Association. 2065438+00 September 16 The Prince Zoo in Kobe City announced that three experts from China had arrived in Japan and began to investigate the cause of the sudden death of the male giant panda "Xing Xing" borrowed from China during artificial insemination.

The three experts will temporarily stay in Japan until 20 10 on September 25th. After investigation, the cause of death was asphyxiation caused by vomiting and mistakenly inhaling stomach contents into the lungs during the recovery process of sperm collection anesthesia.

Baidu Encyclopedia-Giant Panda Xing Xing