The world's oldest known Sumatran
orangutan has died in an Australian zoo aged 62, leaving behind 54 descendants.
Puan, described as the
"grand old lady" of Perth Zoo, was euthanised on Monday due to
age-related complications.
She had been at the zoo since
1968, and was officially recognised by Guinness World Records as the oldest of
her species in 2016.
A critically endangered species,
Sumatran orangutans rarely reach age 50 in the wild, the zoo said.
Believed to have been born in a
jungle in Sumatra, Indonesia, in 1956, Puan left an "incredible
legacy" of 11 children and a total of 54 descendants across the US, Europe
and elsewhere, the zoo said.
"Her genetics count for just
under 10% of the global zoological population," primate supervisor Holly
Thompson said.
"She did so much for the
colony at Perth Zoo and the survival of her species."
Some of Puan's descendants have
been released back into the wild in Sumatra, the zoo said.
According to the World Wildlife
Fund, there are only about 14,600 Sumatran orangutans.
Puan's chief zookeeper wrote an
obituary published in The West Australian newspaper on Tuesday.
"Over the years Puan's
eyelashes had greyed, her movement had slowed down and her mind had started to
wander," Martina
Hart wrote.
"But she remained the
matriarch, the quiet, dignified lady she had always been."
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