Once again it’s time to continue with my slow-burn zoo review series. I’ve just returned from a trip to Tokyo, you see, and while there I visited two zoos. Today we look at the first of them: Ueno Zoological Gardens (usually just called Ueno Zoo), located in Ueno Park in Taito City, central Toyko…
Ueno Zoo – generally regarded as Japan’s flagship zoological collection – is similar in size to London Zoo (about 35 acres) and is old as zoos go, having been founded in 1882. It started out as a menagerie connected to the National Museum of Natural History, built on land owned by the imperial family; it transitioned to government ownership in 1924. Over its long history, the zoo has been notable in its breeding of Giant pandas Ailuropoda melanoleuca (which have been at the zoo since 1972), Aye-aye Daubentonia madagascariensis and Pygmy hippo Choeropsis liberiensis, but like other old zoos worldwide it suffers from the fact that many of its enclosures are old-fashioned and not of satisfactory size for the animals, especially the big ones. Having said that, I didn’t see any indication that animals of any sort were poorly cared for, and indeed it was obvious that modernisation had occurred where space allowed. I will avoid talking about the zoo’s history during WWII because… oh boy, it’s not a pretty story.
Anyway… the south-west quadrant of the zoo is occupied by the enormous Shinobazu Pond, much of which was covered by lotus at the time of our visit. Islands at the edges of the pond – some connected to the mainland by walkways – are home to lemurs (more on that later) as well as to pelicans and other birds.
For reasons of location and history, Ueno Zoo today exists on either side of a large road (Dobutsen dori Street) and is thus split in two, its halves being termed the West Garden and East Garden. Visitors have to cross a high bridge (Aesop Bridge) to get from the western half to the eastern one. In the discussion that follows here, I’m going to talk about exhibits and their animals as I encountered them on my walk through the zoo, rather than in phylogenetic order or anything like that.
On entering Benten Gate at the far south of the West Garden (Shinobazu Pond being to your left), you immediately pass a children’s zoo with domestic rabbits, guinea-pigs and so on. I and my companions entered via the West Garden, but the main entrance is actually in the East Garden. The pond is used by numerous locally occurring wildfowl and other waterbirds and good signage alerts you to what species you might see. Only Eastern spot billed duck Anas zonorhyncha, Great egret and Great cormorant Phalacrocorax carbo were visible during my visit, though the massive amount of vegetation covering the pond meant that ducks, grebes and rails would have been mostly invisible.
A small educational facility nearby houses tanks holding swamp eel, Reeve’s turtle, Chinese softshell turtle and various impressive insects, including mantids. Several birds are also on show in this part of the zoo, including Emu Dromaius novaehollandiae, Japanese night heron Gorsachius goisagi, Oriental white stork Ciconia boyciana and – on the far side of the pond – Cackling geese Branta hutchinsii.
To the pandas! Pretty soon, you approach Panda Forest, a recently constructed building complex housing Giant panda, where you have to join a queue. People are allowed into the building in groups of about 15 at a time and the staff and signage inform you that you’re not allowed to linger at one spot for more than a few minutes. The great joke about Giant pandas at zoo is that you might queue for an age only to then catch a glimpse of the top of the back of a motionless, sleeping panda that’s hardly visible behind the throng of people in front of you.
This was very much not the case here. We only queued for about 20 minutes and the number of people allowed in meant that we could get close to the glass. The pandas were readily visible, as you can see from my photos. The zoo currently has two: Shin Shin, a female, and Ri Ri, a male. They’re bred on several occasions. Both arrived from China in 2011. I’ve seen Giant pandas at three zoos now, most notably at Chengdu Research Base of Giant Panda Breeding (aka PandaBase) in Sichuan, China. I’m of the opinion that bears in general are not built for life in captivity. They require access to massive space and constant behavioural occupation, and confinement very quickly leads to depression and psychosis. But I don’t think that this is necessarily the case for Giant pandas, mostly because they spend so much of the day sitting in the same place, eating bamboo.
The hallowed Shoebill. Nearby, an old African, Cape or Jackass penguin Spheniscus demersus exhibit was empty of actual penguins and American flamingo Phoenicopterus ruber were on show. But the centre of the western half is dedicated to an animal that Ueno Zoo is now quite famous for: the Shoebill Balaeniceps rex. Don’t call it ‘Shoebill stork’, since it’s not a stork nor closely allied to them.
The zoo houses three Shoebills and all were showing during the time of my visit. They weren’t doing much apart from standing around and occasionally taking the odd step, but one did shake its head from side to side in an interesting manner at one point. I don’t think I’ve ever seen live Shoebills before and I took numerous photos of all three, sometimes from angles I haven’t seen before (have you ever actually looked at the back of a Shoebill’s head?). The Shoebill enclosures are spacious and well planted, but don’t include the sort of massive papyrus stands that Shoebills favour in the wild. If they did, I don’t think that we’d get to see much of the birds.
Ueno Zoo knows what a big deal Shoebills are, and numerous Shoebill-related products were on sale. More on that matter later. Shoebills are officially listed as ‘Vulnerable’ in terms of conservation status and things are worrying: there are likely less than 5000 individuals in existence and a long list of issues affect them, including illegal trade, hunting, human disturbance, habitat deterioration and drought.
At the time of writing, I don’t know what the deal is with respect to captive breeding but I do know that a nest protection and reintroduction programme exists in the Bangweulu Wetlands of Zambia. Shoebills produce two eggs but one of the chicks always dies or is killed by its sibling, so a scheme exists whereby the ‘waste’ chick is rescued, raised to fledging, and released. Read about this scheme and adopt a chick yourself here!
‘Small Mammals’: marsupials, aardvarks, echindas, shrews and more. Moving now away from the Giant pandas, Red pandas Ailurus fulgens – the actual pandas – are on show too, and are adjacent to a very impressive Small Mammal House. I like bass reliefs and other aspects of zoo architecture that reflect a zoo’s history and occupants, and this building is one of the best examples, its outsides being decorated with grand artwork depicting bats, squirrels and fishing owls.
Indoors, a daylight section included Common marmoset Callithrix jacchus, a number of Pallas’s cat Otocolobus manul (there’s total inconsistency on whether its name should be written Pallas’s, Pallas’ or Pallas; my favourite solution is to give up and use the Kyrgyz name Manul), a Naked mole-rat Heterocephalus glaber colony (not a first for me, since I’ve also seen them in Oregon Zoo), what I think were Common degu Octodon degus, and Southern three-banded armadillo Tolypeutes matacus.
More interesting was the night-time section of the house. Low, red tint lighting and my lack of a good low-light camera, combined with constant movement from the animals themselves, means that my photos are poor to terrible, but there were a great many animals here that I was very happy to see, mostly for the first time. They include Asian house shrew Suncus murinus (surprisingly big if you’ve only seen ordinary, European shrew species before), Short-beaked echidna Tachyglossus aculeatus, Six-banded armadillo Euphractus sexcinctus, Aardvark Orycteropus afer, Woylie or Brush-tailed rat kangaroo Bettongia penicillata, Greater Egyptian jerboa Jaculus orientalis, Prince Demidoff’s bushbaby Galagoides demidoff (though still included in the old, inclusive version of the genus Galago according to the signage) and Spectral tarsier Tarsius tarsier. That’s an impressive collection, and of note is that all the animals here were out and about, and active.
African megamammals. Moving now to the far north-west, the western edge of the zoo is home to hippos of both species as well as Eastern black rhino Diceros bicornis michaeli (pretty unusual to have Black rhinos in a zoo identified to subspecies). Rothschild’s giraffe Giraffa camelopardalis reticulata / G. reticulata was present too. A noteworthy aspect of the zoo’s history with respect to giraffes is that it was home to two spotless giraffes, one called Ryoko and one Toshiko, born in 1967 and 1972. I didn’t get to see the hippos for time reasons. Jiro, a bull Common hippo Hippopotamus amphibius, died at the zoo in 2022 at a very respectable 38 years old. An Okapi Okapia johnstoni was formerly on show next to the giraffes but died in 2023 and the enclosure was empty at the time of my visit.
While all of the enclosures for these animals looked well designed, with pools, planted areas, trees and rocky faces, they were – as mentioned earlier – very much on the small size given the size of their denizens. I didn’t get the impression that the animals were morose or especially bored (if anything, the contrary), but it did definitely seem that their spaces were not sufficiently big.
I was excited to learn that a reptile house – labelled Vivarium – is present nearby… but it was closed! The building did have rather brutalist overtones, this perhaps meant to superficially convey the rough form of its tenants (it’s not old, having been built in 1999). A Komodo dragon and giant tortoise statue were nearby.
Madagascar ahoy. Finally for the West Garden – and taking us back to the edge of Shinobazu Pond – we come to Aye-aye Forest, a section dedicated to the endemic wildlife of Madagascar. Enclosures (some on islands, as mentioned earlier) are home to Aye-aye, Black-and-white ruffed lemur Varecia variegata, Black lemur Eulemur macaco and Ring-tailed lemur Lemur catta. Radiated tortoise Astrochelys radiata are present too. I understand that a Fossa Cryptoprocta ferox was in the collection until recently (perhaps this year), but has died.
What impressed me most about the exhibit was its inclusion of features relevant to Madagascar’s unique biological heritage and history. A life-sized model of a baobab (albeit not a very big one) stands on the island with the Ring-tailed lemurs, and a slightly oversized bronze statue of an aepyornithid – ‘elephant bird’ or vorompatra – and its massive egg stands proud nearby. Animal statues are good, I always appreciate them.
Also nice were two very artful wooden pillars on either side of the entrance to the Madagacar section. As you can see, they feature Malagasy endemics (chameleons, lemurs, tenrecs) but also depict the location of Madagascar within Gondwana and show a symbolic lemur rafting across the Mozambique Channel from the African mainland. That’s a lot of information to convey via carved wooden posts, and what a great job!
To the east. Late in the day, we walked across Aesop Bridge and entered the zoo’s East Garden. It’s about similar in size to the western half and contains a greater assortment of larger animals, including bears, big cats, elephants and primates. A massive, jagged mock mountain is the centrepiece of a Japanese macaque Macaca fuscata exhibit. Thanks to the good signage, I learnt that this mountain was built in 1932, making it one of the oldest structures in the zoo, and that zoos with similar features were inspired by this one. In addition, the specific Japanese macaques here are from the Shimokita Peninsula of Honshū and are thus the most northerly occurring of all non-human primate species.
Asian elephants Elephas maximus are housed in Elephant Forest nearby. Due to a number of constraints – timing, the extreme heat at the time of our visit, our initial misunderstanding of the zoo’s layout, and slow walking on my part due to an injury – there’s quite a bit of the zoo that we didn’t get to before it started to shut down at 4pm (zoos in Japan close off certain parts of attractions about an hour before final closing, it seems).
As a result, I never got to the Polar Bear and Seal Oceans section or Bird House in the northern part of the East Garden, nor to the section in the south-west devoted to Japanese animals, or the tropical monkeys, bison and prairie-dogs nearby. It seems that I missed a lot: I wasn’t able to get to the area where the bears were, but the zoo’s website lists an amazing four species being on show as of this year (Polar bear, Hokkaido brown bear, Sun bear, and Japanese black bear).
The eastern edge of the East Garden is occupied by Gorilla Woods and Tiger Forest. I didn’t get to the gorillas before the exhibit closed but did see a tiger. I wondered what sort of tiger the zoo might have, given that the majority on show at home in the UK are Siberian Pantheria tigris altaica. It turned out to be a Sumatran tiger P. t. sumatrensis (I later saw a Siberian tiger during my visit to Tama Zoological Park, more on that in future).
On show nearby are Eurasian otter Lutra lutra, Edward’s pheasant Lophura edwardsi, Australian brushturkey Alectura lathami, Golden-breasted starling Lamprotornis regius, Red-headed wood pigeon Columba janthina, Leschenault’s rousette Rousettus leschenaultii and Brazilian or Lowland tapir Tapirus terrestris. Dhole Cuon alpinus are on show too, or were until recent years.
A notable feature of the zoo, encountered at this point, is the Animal Cenotaph, a monument dedicated to animals that have died at the zoo over its history. Signage explained how a monument was initially built in 1931 close to Gorilla Woods and Tiger Forest but that the present one was constructed in 1975. I also saw an animal memorial in a later visit to Tama Zoological Park and wonder if this is a normal feature of eastern zoological parks. It’s a nice and touching feature that gives pause for thought. Remember that many animals kept in captivity – of all sorts, from lizards and molluscs and fish to charismatic big lizards, birds and mammals – become ‘known’ individuals that keepers and visitors form bond with.
Raptors, owls, cranes. A large aviary section on the south-east edge of the zoo was mostly devoted to owls and raptors, and I spent some time here as they had some spectacular animals on show. They included several Indian white-backed vulture Gyps bengalensis, Andean condor Vultur gryphus and Steller’s sea eagle Haliaeetus pelagicus of both sexes, Harris hawk Parabuteo unicinctus and Mountain hawk-eagle Nisaetus nipalensis. Owls on show included Japanese scops Otus semitorques, Snowy owl Bubo scandiaca and Ural owl Strix uralensis.
Also impressive was the crane display, which featured three species in adjacent enclosures (so, more cranes together than I think I’ve seen before): Wattled crane Bugeranus carunculatus, Black-necked crane Grus nigricollis and Red-crowned crane G. japonensis. A Secretary bird Sagittarius serpentarius pair were also here and I got to see them being fed. Southern bald ibis Geronticus calvus were present nearby, as were Hamerkop Scopus umbretta but they weren’t showing. I should add here that some – perhaps many – birds kept by the zoo weren’t seen on my visit, either because they were in aviaries that I didn’t get to, or because they were off-show due to current concerns about H5N1 bird flu.
And that about wraps up all my animal viewings of the zoo. What about those aspects of the zoo that don’t concern the animals on show? An important thing (for European tourists at least) in the Tokyo region concerns access to shade and cold drinks, because boy was it warm and humid during our time there. The zoo was great on these things, there being numerous rest stops and vending machines. We also found the restaurant to be conveniently placed, as well as good, efficient and reasonably priced.
Signs, and statues and statues. Signage at the zoo was very good. All enclosures were well labelled, and big, attractive panels and display boards did a good job of informing you about what was on show. An important feature of zoos for me is the general look of the place, and the buildings, artwork and installations present throughout the zoo grounds. Ueno Zoo does well on those fronts, being attractive and very well landscaped throughout. The walking disability that affected me during my visit made me acutely aware of stairs and steep slopes, and I’m pleased to say that Ueno was good and convenient in terms of access.
I also like statues at zoos. If they’re not especially accurate in terms of anatomy or proportions… well, that’s ok because they’re abstract. If they are accurate… well, that’s great too because they’ve succeeded in depicting the form or feel or size of the subject. The sculptures at Ueno were all great: there were the Komodo dragon, giant tortoise and vorompatra already mentioned, but others I saw included an Asian elephant and one devoted to a famous, and famously endangered, east Asian species specially associated with Japan: the Crested ibis Nipponia nippon.
On shops and things to buy. Finally… here in the UK I am constantly disappointed by the state of zoo shops. They have a few souvenirs that adults might be interested in – like hats, towels and fridge magnets – but otherwise they don’t cater for anyone seriously interested in zoos, in animals, or in natural history.
Well, Japan has very much the opposite problem. They know exactly what they’re doing and have phenomenally good stuff in their shops, catering very much to an interested adult audience. A zoo that features an especially remarkable and charismatic animal – like Shoebill or Manul or Tasmanian devil – will have a whole section devoted to merch and products featuring that animal, it’s great. High-quality toys, models and figures are present, and (as a collector of such) I was simply thrilled at what was available. Kids can buy and enjoy these things, for sure, but they’re not for kids only.
And that is where we end my look at Ueno Zoo, I hope you enjoyed it. As ever, we finish with my wholly subjective scoring system…
Selection of species: 7 out of 10
Zoo nerd highlights: Giant panda, Shoebill, Short-beaked echidna, House shrew, Aye-aye, Naked mole-rat, selection of cranes together
Quality of signage: 9 out of 10
Value for money: 9 out of 10
Overall worthiness: 8 out of 10
And for previous articles in my zoo reviews series, see…
Tet Zoo Reviews Zoos: Edinburgh Zoo, August 2016
Tet Zoo Reviews Zoos: Colchester Zoo, October 2017
TetZoo Reviews Zoos: the Isle of Wight Zoo, February 2020
TetZoo Reviews Zoos: ZSL Whipsnade Zoo, June 2021
TetZoo Reviews Zoos: Bristol Zoo, July 2021
TetZoo Reviews Zoos: Tripoli Zoo in Libya, January 2023
Tet Zoo Reviews Zoos: New Forest Wildlife Park, April 2024