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"Panda's, Panda's and more Panda's"







"The Giant Panda"

The Giant Panda has black ears and black patches around its eyes. Its playful nature makes it a favorite animal at the zoo.

Giant PandaIs a rare mammal related to the raccoon. It lives in western China and Tibet, and is so difficult to find that only a few have been brought to the United States alive. The giant panda has a white chubby body with black legs and shoulders. Its face looks like that of a bear, and is white with a round, black spot around each eye. It has small, round, black ears.

Scientists in Europe considered pandas a myth until the middle of the 1800's. About 1870, French missionaries in China sent the bones and skin of a giant panda to a Paris museum.

Scienitific Classification: The giant panda belongs to the family Ailuropodidae. It is genus Ailuropoda, species melanoleuca. Harold E.Anthony




"The Giant Panda"

Giant Panda, common name for a bear found in provinces of western China. The giant panda resembles other bears in general appearance, with the exception of the black patches over its eyes, ears, and legs and the black band across its shoulders. Giant pandas live in bamboo forests at high elevations and feed primarily on bamboo. Unlike other bears, they vocalize by bleating rather than roaring. Females weigh about 80 kg (about 180 lb), and males weigh about 100 kg (about 220 lb). The giant panda's so-called sixth front toe is not a digit or claw but an enlarged wrist bone that functions as a thumb in grasping food. Giant pandas feed almost exclusively on bamboo, which is not highly nutritious. Furthermore, some bamboo species flower simultaneously and die shortly afterward, occasionally leading to starvation among giant panda populations. If their usual food supply is threatened, giant pandas may feed on gardens, crops, and even chickens, but they are little threat to people except in close encounters. The habitats of family groups and the survival of juvenile giant pandas are still poorly understood. Giant pandas seem to have no permanent den and do not hibernate, although they shelter in the winter in dens or hollow trees. Giant pandas are fairly solitary most of the year. Females may live in loose groups within the range of a dominant male. Breeding takes place from March to May, and the young are born three to six months later weighing only 85 to 140 g (3 to 5 oz). Two cubs may be born, but only one survives. The young cry loudly for help and require great care from the mothers, and losses of young are a serious problem in the recovery and management of giant-panda populations. The giant panda's broken range has created six isolated populations. The total number of giant pandas in the wild is now about 1500. Because giant pandas are restricted to a small area of western China, their status may be the most precarious of all the species of bears. World interest and research funds from many nations have improved the giant panda's status, but the species remains vulnerable to humans. Scientific classification: The giant panda was formerly classified as a member of the raccoon family, but it now is considered a true bear.



"Giant Panda," Microsoft(R) Encarta(R) 98 Encyclopedia. (c) 1993-1997 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.





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