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FLORA AND FAUNA
London Zoo desperately seeking mate for almost-extinct fish species
by Staff Writers
London (UPI) May 10, 2013


S. Korea to release dolphin back into wild
Seoul (AFP) May 11, 2013 - A 13-year-old dolphin was Saturday being transported to an ocean pen off a South Korean island for training to prepare it for release back into the wild after four years in a Seoul zoo, officials said.

The female Indo-Pacific bottlenose dolphin, which had been at Seoul Grand Park Zoo since 2009, was flown by a special charter jet to the southern island of Jeju accompanied by an 11-member team of veterinarians and zoo keepers.

"It is not only a matter of one dolphin going home but a matter of the relationship between animals and humans, between Mother Nature and humans," Seoul mayor Park Won-Woon said.

Television pictures showed the famous dolphin called "Jedol" being transferred by stretcher to a vehicle for its journey to the airport and its flight to Jeju.

The costs for releasing the dolphin were raised through donations led by animal right activists.

Jedol will join two other dolphins in an open ocean cage in Jeju for adjustment training before being set free as early as next month.

In March last year, Seoul Grand Park Zoo suspended a popular dolphin show starring Jedol and two other dolphins over claims by activists that they were captured illegally.

The zoo decided to return Jedol to the wild but keep the two others because they were too old and weak to be released.

The London Zoo says it is desperately seeking a mate for two samples of a critically endangered tropical fish in its collection -- unfortunately both male.

The Mangarahara cichlid, described by zookeepers as "gorgeously ugly," is extinct in the wild and zoo officials said the hunt for a female is especially urgent since its two male fish are 12 years old.

In addition to the two cichlids in the London Zoo there is a single male fish in Berlin. The German zoo had a female in captivity but attempts to breed the pair ended in disaster when the male killed her.

"It's a fairly common thing with cichlids," London Zoo's aquarium curator Brian Zimmerman told BBC News.

London Zoo officials said a request to other aquariums around the world failed to come up with a mate, so they're now hoping a private collector somewhere may have a female.

Any collector having a Mangarahara cichlid is likely to be aware of what they have, Zimmerman said.

"They are not a particularly beautiful fish -- they are gorgeously ugly, they are unusual. They are more a connoisseur's type of fish.

"They need quite a bit of space; the males are bigger than your hand, and they need a decent tank," he said.

The species is named after the Mangarahara River in Madagascar where they were first identified.

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