Ref: Kematian seekor harimau Sumatera, Soyono, di kebun binatang Washington, 
disedihkan. Di NKRI  macan. gajah, harimau, orang utan etc dimatikan tak ada 
yang sedih begitupun ribuan, puluhanribu, ratusanribu atau jutaan  manusia 
dibabat tidak ada yang sedih, terkecuali hanya keluarga korban. 

http://www.washingtonpost.com/local/national-zoo-mourns-loss-of-soyono-sumatran-tiger/2012/11/24/f9e1aa8e-3694-11e2-9cfa-e41bac906cc9_story.html?wpisrc=nl_headlines

National Zoo mourns loss of Soyono, Sumatran tiger

By Martin Weil, Sunday, November 25, 3:29 AM 
She was powerful, and she possessed a rare beauty. She lived for years in the 
heart of Washington, and those who were closest to her regarded her as a queen. 
Now Soyono, the Sumatran tiger, is dead.

Soyono was euthanized at the National Zoo last week. She was 19 years old, 
older than such tigers usually live in the wild. But even with the best of 
care, she was close to the limits of her life span.

Last month, she had begun to walk more slowly, zoo officials said, and seemed 
to have trouble with her balance.

She appeared to be suffering from spondylosis, a degenerative spinal disorder, 
which afflicts big cats as they age.

Despite treatment, it became apparent that her health and quality of life were 
declining steadily, the zoo said.

But for years, she had been on view, an orange, black and white symbol of 
predatory power, able to give a ferocious roar.

She weighed almost 200 pounds, pounced on unsuspecting ducks and offered a 
glimpse of a jungle world.

“Soyono is not a tame tiger,” zoo staff members who worked with her wrote 
earlier in an online posting.

“She was always quick to understand what we wanted,” they reported.

“Sometimes she would work with us to determine exactly what it was that we 
wanted so she could refuse to do it again. There is a reason that an adult 
female cat is called a queen. And she has always been regal.”

Soyono was born at the zoo on June 14, 1993, and she gave birth to seven cubs 
in three litters. They were sent on to other zoos to help keep the endangered 
species alive. Her mate died in 2010.

The zoo said there are only about 700 of her sisters and brothers in the world, 
and only 400 of them are in the Indonesian forests from which they come.

Two Sumatran tigers still prowl the zoo’s Great Cats exhibit: a male, Kavi, and 
a young female, Damai.


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