The Saigon Zoo is a green blanket seen from above. Photo: Gian Thanh Son/VnExpress
Saigon Zoo, the world’s eighth oldest, celebrated its 150th birthday Wednesday.
Known officially as the Saigon Zoo and Botanical Gardens, the 20-hectare (49 acres) area has around 4,000 trees of various species besides more than 600 animals.
Work on the zoo began in March 1864, five years after the French colonized the city. Louis Adolphe Germain, a veterinarian in the French military, was assigned to plant trees and raise some animals on a 12-hectare area at the foot of the bridge over the Thi Nghe Canal in District 1.
The French government opened the zoo a year later and expanded it to 20 hectares at the end of the year, and appointed botanist J.B. Loius Pierre, who had been working in botanical gardens in Calcutta, India, as its director.
Pierre (1833-1905) worked at the zoo for 12 years and helped bring many trees from America, Africa and other Southeast Asian countries to the zoo as well as streets in the city’s downtown. The zoo has a pillar commemorating him. It also has a temple for Vietnam’s founders, the Hung Kings, and a historical museum with thousands of valuable relics from Vietnam and overseas.
By 1869 the zoo had 509 species of animals including 344 birds and 45 lizards. There are rare species like the rhinoceros, Indochinese tiger and yellow-cheeked gibbon.
The animal cages at the zoo were expanded from 8,500 square meters in 1975 to 25,000 square meters in 2000.
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