He hippo in Japan zoo turns out to be a she

Japan hippopotamus

This undated handout image released to AFP by Osaka’s Tennoji Zoo on April 23, 2024 shows “Gen-chan”, a 12-year-old hippopotamus at the Tennoji Zoo in Osaka. The 12-year-old hippo – who came to Osaka in 2017 from a zoo in Mexico at the age of five and had been believed to be male – turned out to be female after a DNA test, the zoo in western Japan said. AFP

TOKYO — Betrayed by its DNA and unmanly toilet habits, a hippopotamus in Japan thought for seven years to be a he is in fact a she, the zoo where the wallowing giant lives said Tuesday.

The 12-year-old came to Osaka Tennoji Zoo in 2017 from the Africam Safari animal park in Mexico, where officials attested on customs documents that the then five-year-old was male.

But zookeepers long scratched their heads, a spokeswoman told AFP.

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In particular, Gen-chan did not display the typical male hippo behavior of splattering faeces around while defecating — with a propeller-like tail motion — in order to mark territory.

Nor did it make courtship calls to females and zookeepers were unable to visually identify any male genitalia, a dangerous task in such a large and potentially aggressive beast.

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“Therefore, we requested a DNA test at an external institution, and the result showed it was female,” the zoo said in a statement posted last week.

“We will keep doing our best to provide comfortable environment to Gen-chan, so everyone, please come and see,” it said.

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