TAIPEI, Taiwan — Tuan Tuan, one of two giant pandas gifted to Taiwan from China, died Saturday after a brief illness, the Taipei Zoo said.
No cause of death was immediately
given, but earlier reports said the panda was believed to have a malignant
brain tumor, prompting China to send a pair of experts to Taiwan earlier this
month to help with his treatment.
Tuan Tuan did not respond and
after a series of seizures Saturday was placed in an induced coma, according to
Taiwanese news reports.
Tuan Tuan and his mate, Yuan Yuan, were gifted to the
zoo in 2008 during a time of warming relations between China and Taiwan, which
split amid civil war in 1949. Both were born in China in 2004 and succeeded in
having a pair of cubs in Taiwan.
The average life span for pandas in the wild is 15-20
years, while they can live for 30 years or more under human care.
Ties between Beijing and Taipei have declined sharply
in the years since the pair’s arrival, with China cutting off contacts in 2016
following the election of independence-leaning President Tsai Ing-wen, who was
re-elected in 2020.
China sends pandas abroad as a sign of goodwill but
maintains ownership over the animals and any cubs they produce. An unofficial
national mascot, the animals are native to southwestern China, reproduce rarely
and rely almost exclusively on a diet of bamboo.
An estimated 1,800 pandas live in the wild, while
another 500 are in zoos or reserves, mostly in Sichuan, where they are a
protected species but remain under threat from habitat loss.
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