Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The red panda is a small mammal native to the eastern Himalayas and southwestern China, where it inhabits coniferous and broadleaf forests. It is endangered by poaching and habitat loss, and is protected by nature conservation projects in China and other countries.
Red pandas are not bears, but they are endangered carnivores that live in the Himalayas and eat mostly bamboo. Learn about their unique features, communication skills, scent marking and why they are not suitable as pets.
Ultimate red panda guide: Uncover the secrets of the world’s cutest ...
Red pandas are endangered mammals that live in the rainy mountain forests of Nepal, India, Bhutan, northern Myanmar, and central China. They have a distinctive reddish-brown coat, a long tail,...
Red pandas live in high-altitude, temperate forests with bamboo understories in the Himalayas and other high mountains. They are native to Nepal, China, Myanmar, India and Tibet, and are threatened by habitat loss and poaching.
Learn about the endangered red panda, a bamboo-eating carnivore with a distinctive coat and a pseudothumb. Discover how they live in the trees, camouflage themselves and face threats from...
Learn why the red panda is the only animal that deserves the name panda, and how it differs from the giant panda in appearance, behavior and diet. Discover how the red panda evolved its...
Red panda, reddish brown, long-tailed, raccoonlike mammal that is found in the mountain forests of the Himalayas and adjacent areas of eastern Asia. Although a single species is recognized, evidence suggests that there may be two species.
Despite sharing a common name, red pandas are not closely related to giant pandas—often considered the real panda. Phylogenetically, the red panda falls under a unique taxonomic group called Ailuridae, sharing common traits with mustelids, which includes racoons, weasels and skunks.
Learn about the red panda, a small and endangered mammal that lives in the Eastern Himalayas and eats mostly bamboo. Find out how WWF works to protect its habitat, monitor its population, and reduce threats such as poaching and climate change.