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Ah Meng

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Specific female Sumatran orangutan
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Ah Meng
Ah Meng, an icon of the Singapore Zoo
SpeciesPongo abelii
SexFemale
Born18 June 1960
Sumatra,Indonesia
Died8 February 2008 (aged 47)
Singapore Zoo
Offspring5

Ah Meng (circa 18 June 1960 – 8 February 2008) (Chinese: 阿明) was a femaleSumatran orangutan and a tourism icon ofSingapore. Ah Meng was originally from Indonesia and was kept illegally in Singapore as a domestic pet before being recovered by a veterinarian in 1971. She was then eleven years old and was given a home at theSingapore Zoo.

Ah Meng was the head of her small clan, which lives in a large enclosure with about twenty other orangutans. She had five children, twelve grandchildren and five great-grandchildren.

She belonged to the Sumatran orangutan species, a rarer breed of orangutan now critically endangered due toillegal logging andpoaching. There are about only 7,500 Sumatran orangutans left in the wild in therainforests ofSumatra,Indonesia. Ah Meng died on 8 February 2008.

Life

[edit]
Family of Ah Meng and her offspring:
(from left) Satria, Sayang and Riau

Ah Meng was smuggled from Indonesia and kept illegally as a domestic pet before being recovered by a veterinarian in 1971.[1] She was then eleven years old and was given a home at theSingapore Zoo.[1]

Due to her early years being raised by a family, Ah Meng was more approachable by humans than other primates in her clan. Due to her interactive nature, she was the first to host the zoo's 'Breakfast With Ah Meng' programme, whereby visitors would eat their morning meal and then have a photograph taken with the orangutan. By allowing visitors to interact closely with Ah Meng and other orangutans, the Singapore Zoo aims to raise public awareness of the importance of preserving the orangutan's natural habitat as well as of other environmental issues.

Ah Meng was the poster girl of the Singapore Zoo. Pictures of her have been used in Singapore's tourism advertisements worldwide. She has also been featured in over 30 travel films and more than 300 articles. Some of the foreign dignitaries and celebrities that visited Ah Meng includedPrince Philip,Michael Jackson andSteve Irwin.[1]

In March 1982, during the shooting of a promotional video atMacRitchie Reservoir, Ah Meng climbed a tree and stayed there for two nights. On her way down, she fell seven stories and broke her right arm.[2]

In 1992, theSingapore Tourism Promotion Board conferred Ah Meng a "Special Tourism Ambassador" award in recognition of her contribution to tourism in Singapore. She was the first non-human recipient of the award. She received a certificate and a stack of bananas.

In March 1992, Ah Meng attacked a French female research student who was studying orangutan behaviour and spent much time with Ah Meng's long-time keeper, Alagappasamy Chellaiyahy.[2]

Ah Meng was specially featured in the Singapore Guide book of 1988, The Singapore Treasury by Andreas and Carola Augustin.

As she aged, her public appearances became less frequent for fear of subjecting her to stress.

Death

[edit]

Ah Meng died on 8 February 2008 due to old age. She was 47 years old, and was survived by two sons, Hsing Hsing (who died of diabetic complications at thePerth Zoo in 2017) and Satria, and three daughters, Medan, Hong Bao (named for the reddish hair orangutans have that shares the same colour as thered envelopes given to relatives during theLunar New Year or weddings), and Sayang (darling), 12 grandchildren and 5 great-grandchildren.[3]

On 10 February 2008, amemorial service for Ah Meng was held before a crowd of 4000 visitors at the Singapore Zoo.[3][4]

As a tribute to her, the next orangutan born at the Singapore Zoo will be named Ah Meng Junior. Adurian tree was planted at her grave because durian was her favourite fruit.[5] A life-sized bronze statue forged in her image was also unveiled. Ishta, Ah Meng's granddaughter, Sayang and Galdikas' daughter, was chosen to take over the namesake of Ah Meng.[6]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^abcNoh, Nurulnadiah Mohamed (9 February 2008)."Ah Meng dies | The Straits Times".www.straitstimes.com. Retrieved19 December 2022.
  2. ^ab"The life and times of the zoo's most famous resident".Asiaone. Retrieved5 September 2012.
  3. ^ab"4,000 visitors bid farewell to celebrity orang utan, Ah Meng".asiaone.com.
  4. ^Suhaimi, Nur Dianah (10 February 2008)."Memorial service for a Singapore icon".The Straits Times.ISSN 0585-3923. Retrieved26 September 2024.
  5. ^Justin Corfield (2 December 2010).Historical Dictionary of Singapore. Scarecrow Press. pp. 249–.ISBN 978-0-8108-7387-2.
  6. ^"Granddaughter of late Ah Meng named the new face of Singapore Zoo".The Straits Times. 26 February 2016.
Notable non-humanapes
Bonobos
Chimpanzees
Gorillas
Orangutans
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