Chattanooga Times Free Press

Red panda dies at zoo, another ill

Old age blamed for death

- By Pam Sohn Staff Writer

One of the Chattanoog­a Zoo’s three endangered red pandas has died and another is seriously ill. Zoo officials say all the pandas are over the age of 11 — geriatric for red pandas since the animals normally live about eight to 10 years.

Bella, the red panda who died after fighting a skin infection for more than a year, was 11. The sick red panda, Butch, is 16. In a prepared statement, zoo officials said he is suffering from excess fluid around his lungs.

“The fact that the Chattanoog­a Zoo’s red panda population is so old speaks volumes as to the quality of care they are receiving from our incredibly passionate keepers and veterinary staff,” zoo Executive Director Darde Long said in the statement.

On Thursday, zoo officials did not respond to repeated requests for informatio­n about how the zoo first got Bella, Butch and the third red panda, as well as what percentage of the zoo’s animals are considered “geriatric.”

In the zoo’s statement, officials said “results from Bella’s necropsy showed the stress relating from battling the skin infection was compounded by a rare form of Addison’s disease, completely asymptomat­ic in exotic animals and very difficult to diagnose.”

Addison’s is an adrenal gland disorder, according to the National Library of Medicine.

Sandra Harbison, spokeswoma­n for the University of Tennessee’s College of Veterinary Medicine, which conducted the necropsy on Bella, said she is awaiting Long’s permission to release the results.

The Chattanoog­a Zoo at Warner Park has come under fire since January 2011 when its signature animal, Hank the chimpanzee, was found dead. The chimp, too, was geriatric at 42, and he died of a heart condition.

Although his death was deemed to be from natural causes, it unleashed a barrage of complaints by zoo workers, former employees and even visitors about conditions there. In just a few weeks before Hank’s death, at least nine other animals had died.

From September 2010 until August 2011, U.S. Department of Agricultur­e zoo inspectors pelted the zoo with five inspection­s and 21 “noncomplia­nce” findings, including one observing that the zoo did not have enough hay on hand to feed animals even for a few days.

But the last inspection — in August — gave the zoo a perfect record with no noncomplia­nt findings.

Long, through board member and spokeswoma­n Robin Derryberry, declined last month to talk about the turnaround.

On Thursday, Steve Feldman, spokesman for the Associatio­n of Zoos and Aquariums, a trade group which accredits zoos, said AZA’S reinspecti­on was completed last month. A hearing to decide whether the zoo will continue its accreditat­ion will occur in March.

Captive animals often live longer than those in the wild. That leaves many zoos coping with geriatric issues, Feldman said.

After last year’s deaths, zoo board members and officials said the facility might have to reassess its policy of taking in many animals that

 ??  ?? A red panda eats in his enclosure at the Chattanoog­a Zoo on Thursday.
A red panda eats in his enclosure at the Chattanoog­a Zoo on Thursday.
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 ??  ?? Fourteen-year-old male red panda Nigayla relaxes in a box at the Chattanoog­a Zoo on Thursday afternoon.
Fourteen-year-old male red panda Nigayla relaxes in a box at the Chattanoog­a Zoo on Thursday afternoon.

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