North Carolina Zoo mourns the loss of polar bear Payton

The North Carolina Zoo announced the loss of its male polar bear Payton on Oct. 25. The North Carolina Zoo staff and animal care team are devastated by the loss of this beloved polar bear. 

Payton was being transferred to the Louisville Zoo in Kentucky as part of a polar bear breeding partnership. The transfer was recommended by the Association of Zoos and Aquariums (AZA). Payton was accompanied by an experienced care team during the planned transfer operation. 

After the care team left the North Carolina Zoo with Payton, they performed routine checks on the 1,000-pound polar bear during the trip. On the second check, less than two hours away from the North Carolina Zoo, the care team found Payton non-responsive. He was immediately transported to a nearby large animal veterinarian, who confirmed that Payton had passed.

The bear was transported back to the North Carolina Zoo, where a necropsy (an animal autopsy) was conducted by the zoo’s veterinary staff.

According to Dr. Jb Minter, the zoo’s director of animal health, “The necropsy indicated some evidence of cardiac disease, a tumor on his adrenal gland as well as some moderate osteoarthritis in keeping with his advanced age. Tissue samples will be sent to outside laboratories for further testing to help determine the cause of his death.”

A full investigation into the incident will be conducted. 

Payton arrived at the North Carolina Zoo in January 2021 to be a mate for female polar bear Anana, as recommended by the AZA. The AZA uses a science-based approach to matching bears under human care in an attempt to foster more cub births. He had previously been at the Memphis Zoo and was born at Brookfield Zoo Nov. 8, 2003. 

Polar bear keeper Melissa Vindigni reminisced, “He was the best boy bear. His trust was worth the effort to earn, and it was a privilege and honor to have earned that. He loved training and interacting with his keepers and vet techs, and his trust in us really shined with his willingness to work with us on his own health care. I learned so much from him, and I was blessed to work with him. I will never forget the things he taught me.” 

Contributed/Courtesy photo.