An An, world's oldest male giant panda in captivity, dies at age 35

An An, who was battling high blood pressure, was gifted to Hong Kong by China in 1999 and lived to the age of 35 – the equivalent of 105 years in human age.

An An's health condition had started deteriorating over the past three weeks.
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An An's health condition had started deteriorating over the past three weeks.

The oldest-ever male giant panda in captivity has died at age 35 at a Hong Kong theme park after his health deteriorated.

Ocean Park mourned on Thursday An An as a family member who grew with the park and built bonds with locals and tourists.

“An An has brought us fond memories with numerous heart-warming moments. His cleverness and playfulness will be dearly missed,” Paulo Pong, chairman of Ocean Park Corporation, said in a statement.

An An lived most of his life at Ocean Park after he and a female panda were gifted to Hong Kong by China in 1999. The female panda, Jia Jia, died in 2016 at age 38, making her the oldest-ever female panda in captivity.

An An had high blood pressure, a common condition among geriatric pandas. 

Over the past three weeks, An An had been kept out of sight from visitors at the park as his health worsened. He stopped eating solid food and was significantly less active in recent days.

READ MORE: Pandas become too lazy to mate in a perfect habitat, scientists suggest

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Within an hour of the park announcing his death, hundreds of tributes appeared under the social media post.

'Panda diplomacy'

Last week, hundreds left comments on an Ocean Park post about An An's condition, wishing him a speedy recovery.

He was euthanised to prevent further suffering Thursday morning after veterinarians from Ocean Park and government authorities consulted the China Conservation and Research Centre for the Giant Panda, Ocean Park said.

“An An lived a full life that ended at the respectable age of 35 – the equivalent of 105 years in human age,” the statement read.

Hong Kong was given another panda pair – Ying Ying, a female, and a male, Le Le – in 2007 to celebrate the 10th anniversary of the city’s return to China.

China commonly engages in “panda diplomacy” where the mammals exclusively found in China are leased to other countries as a sign of goodwill.

READ MORE: Berlin celebrates birth of Germany's first giant panda twins

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