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This is a partial list of giant pandas, both alive and deceased.The giant panda is a conservation-reliant vulnerable species. [1] Wild population estimates of the bear vary; one estimate shows that there are about 1,590 individuals living in the wild, [2] while a 2006 study via DNA analysis estimated that this figure could be as high as 2,000 to 3,000.
Hua Hua and her twin sister He Ye were born on 4 July 2020, to parents Cheng Gong and Mei Lan. [1] [4] Due to their mother's age (having given birth at 20 years old, which is equivalent to 80 in human years), the two cubs were fostered by other pandas alongside their own cubs.
The Chengdu Zoo's biggest attraction are giant pandas and they house three of them. [2] Most animals live in enclosed areas. The zoo was opened in 1953, it moved to its current location in 1976. [3] The zoo is 43 acres large and has bred 58 giant pandas in all. [4]
[1] [2] The pandas arrived at Chiang Mai Zoo on 12 October 2003 to begin a ten-year conservation program to breed giant pandas. [1] [3] Chuang Chuang and Linhui successfully artificially bred and produced an offspring named Lin Ping. [4] [5] The baby panda Lin Ping, female, was born on 27 May 2009 also resides in Chiang Mai Zoo. [6] [7]
Chi Chi was a female giant panda born in Sichuan, China in 1954, and was caught in May 1955 in Baoxing, Sichuan, and moved to the Beijing Zoo in June. In May 1957, Kliment Voroshilov made a request for a panda for the Moscow Zoo during his visit to China, and she was sent to Moscow with another panda in the same month. However, despite this ...
Red Panda in Chengdu Panda Breeding Research Center Dujiangyan Breeding Yefang Research Center. Chengdu Panda Base was founded in 1987 by the Chengdu Municipal People's Government. It started with 6 giant pandas that were rescued from the wild. By 2008, it had 124 panda births, and the captive panda population has grown to 83.
' American orchid; beautiful orchid '; born September 6, 2006) is a male giant panda born at Zoo Atlanta in Atlanta, Georgia, after his mother's, Lun Lun, record-setting 35-hour labor. [1] Originally identified by zoo staffers as female, Mei Lan was determined to be male by staff in China at the Chengdu Research Base of Panda Breeding. [2]
On August 21, 1999, Bai Yun gave birth to her first cub, Hua Mei, who is also the first giant panda born in the United States to survive to adulthood. Bai Yun has since given birth to five other cubs, Mei Sheng (2003), Su Lin (2005), Zhen Zhen (2007), Yun Zi (2009), and Xiao Liwu (2012), all via natural mating.