Zoo Stock Species and the Red List

Zoo Stock

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This indicates that the species is included in the Second Zoo Stock Plan, which was formulated by the Tokyo Metropolitan Government in 2018. The plan sets goals for the next 10 years in three areas: "species conservation," "contribution to wildlife conservation," and "environmental education and conservation awareness." 124 animal species are included.

What is the Red List?

Based on scientific research, this is a list of wildlife classified by rank (category) indicating the degree of risk of extinction.
Livng Things Encyclopedia shows the categories (mainland and islands) assessed by the IUCN (International Union for Conservation of Nature) at the global level, the Ministry of the Environment for Japan, and the Tokyo Metropolitan Government for Tokyo.

The higher the category in each table, the higher the risk of extinction, and CR, EN, and VU are the three categories known as "endangered species." In Tokyo, species that are not at the NT (near threatened) level but are relatively rare are considered "species of concern."

IUCN categories

EX

extinction

EW

Extinction in the wild

CR+EN

CR

Serious crisis

EN

crisis

VU

emergency

NT

Near Threatened

LC・○

Low Concern

DD

Data shortage

LP

Japan (Ministry of the Environment) Category

EX

extinction

EW

Extinction in the wild

CR+EN

Endangered species

CR

Critically Endangered

EN

Endangered species

VU

Endangered species

NT

Near Threatened

LC・○

DD

Lack of information

LP

Endangered
local population

Tokyo Category

EX

extinction

EW

Extinction in the wild

CR+EN

Endangered species

CR

Critically Endangered

EN

Endangered species

VU

Endangered species

NT

Near Threatened

LC・○

Unranked

DD

Lack of information

LP

Endangered
local population

Creatures at Ueno Zoo

Aye-aye

Daubentonia madagascariensis

アイアイ
アイアイ
アイアイ

This is a primitive monkey that lives in Madagascar. It is nocturnal and is characterized by its long tail and large ears. The middle and ring fingers on its front feet are long, and the thin middle finger in particular is useful for pulling insects out of trees to eat. Its front teeth are sharp and can easily bite through even hard objects, so it uses them to make holes in tree branches where insects hide and to eat the insides of hard nuts.

classification Mammalia, Primates, Aye-aye aye
English name Aye-aye
distribution Almost the entire coast of Madagascar
Residence forest
Size
Head torso length: 50-60cm
Weight: Male 2.6kg, Female 2.4kg
food Omnivorous, feeding on seeds, insect larvae, fruits, flowers, nectar, etc.
Red List
IUCN: EN (crisis)
Ueno Zoo exhibition area