Wednesday, June 11, 2008

God speed little panda, god speed.


Panda bear killed in quake laid to rest in reserve

Updated Tue. Jun. 10 2008 6:10 PM ET

The Associated Press

WOLONG, China -- Mao Mao the panda's remains were gently laid in a wooden crate and wheeled to a patch of ground in China's famed Wolong Nature Reserve where a freshly dug grave awaited.

The center's director stood cap in hand and shoveled in a few spades of dirt. Then Mao Mao's keeper stepped forward crying, and arranged two apples and a piece of bread by the grave. Three minutes of silence followed as workers gathered around the grave.

Nearly a month after she was crushed to death when China's devastating earthquake collapsed the wall of her enclosure, 9-year-old Mao Mao was laid to rest Tuesday in a quiet corner of the Wolong panda breeding center.

The facility was badly damaged by the May 12 quake but officials initially thought all 64 pandas had survived. Then they discovered two were missing. Mao Mao's body was discovered Monday, buried under debris.

As He Changgui, Mao Mao's keeper, turned away red-eyed after Tuesday's burial, the director of U.S.-based Pandas International, Suzanne Braden, put her arm around him.

"You must look after her babies, OK?" said Braden, who had arrived a day earlier to survey the quake damage and help in the recovery. "And their babies."

He nodded. "I will go back to see her everyday," he said.

The loss of the panda, a mother of five, was a blow to the breeding program at Wolong, which continues to struggle to recover. The quake was centered just 20 miles away in the heart of Sichuan province's mountainous panda country, and five Wolong staff members were killed.

The endangered panda is revered as a national symbol in China, where about 1,600 pandas live in the wild, mostly in Sichuan and the neighboring province of Shaanxi. Another 180 have been bred in captivity.

For the staff at Wolong, Mao Mao's loss was all the more acute because she was killed in her prime, something that rarely happens, said David Wildt, who heads the Center for Species Survival at the Smithsonian's National Zoo in Washington.

"I don't think it's surprising there's a great deal of concern over the loss of this animal," said Wildt, who has worked closely with the Chinese panda program for more than a decade.

"The people who work at Wolong are completely dedicated to those animals. Most of the animals have been born there. The way they are raised, they are handled a great deal. People get to know these animals. They're all named and have their own personalities."

Ron Swaisgood, who worked at Wolong for seven years, said he'd never seen a funeral service like the one Tuesday.

"I think that this is probably a result that everyone is feeling very sentimental about the earthquake and this tragic loss of life. She didn't die of old age," said Swaisgood, who co-heads the Giant Panda Conservation Unit at the San Diego Zoo.

More than 69,000 people were killed by the quake, which left 5 million people homeless, crushing buildings and tossing down boulders the size of cars. Frequent aftershocks continue to rattle the area.

Wedged in a narrow valley a few hours drive from the capital of Sichuan province, Wolong was pummeled by landslides on both sides. Panda enclosures were smashed, and the entry gate for visitors was buried under stones, forcing the 30 tourists there at the time to escape by climbing a ladder through the center's clinic.

Wolong's 14 panda cubs played outdoors Tuesday, less than 30 yards from a huge pile of debris left by a landslide. They had been at the same spot when the earthquake hit.

"They were so nervous when it happened," said Huang Yan, the deputy director of research. "I found seven of them huddled together."

The center remains closed to visitors, and Huang said it might not open again until next year. Six pandas have been sent to another reserve in Sichuan, and eight have been sent to Beijing for an Olympics stay at the Beijing Zoo that was planned before the quake.

Now one of the biggest questions is this year's breeding program. The quake hit during what the Chinese delicately call the "falling in love period," -- a 24- to 72-hour window each spring when female pandas are fertile -- and 18 females had been artificially inseminated. No one knows what the effects of the quake will be.

"We still don't know how many are pregnant," Huang said. "We still don't know what will happen."

Also shaken in the quake were the fragile collections of semen from more than 15 pandas, both dead and alive, meant to help the species' diversity. The samples are kept in aging freezers that are still run, like the rest of the center, on a generator -- which broke down briefly Tuesday.

"The first things they asked for after the quake were freezers," Braden said. "With only 1,600 pandas left in the wild, genetically every sperm is important."

With the funeral over, the center turned quiet Tuesday. Mao Mao's keeper, He, had cared for the panda since she was 3, speaking to her in the local Sichuan dialect as he worked.

"It's like you could say something and she would understand," he said. "If you were happy, she was happy too."

Mao Mao was brought to Wolong from the wild in 2000 and didn't have a name at first, said Swaisgood, so he called her "Wild Thing."

"She had a different personality than the other pandas ... When she was young she was a bit more independent and wilder, a little more sensitive to her environment. She very quickly endeared herself to all of us," he said.

Swaisgood said it was likely Mao Mao was pregnant when she was killed because she mated successfully in the spring.

"Mao Mao was a little unique genetically because she was brought in from the wild," Swaisgood said. That made her especially valuable, though her five cubs meant she had good genetic representation.

"With any breeding program you want to maintain a diverse gene pool to avoid inbreeding," he said.

At Wolong, the staff mark the days since the quake by little improvements: the return of cell phone service. The first open road to the outside world, less than two weeks ago. The crucial truckloads of bamboo for the pandas, one every five days.

But the program can't stay here, Huang said. It has to move to a safer location, with more room to grow for the new cubs.

"This place is dangerous," he said. "It's amazing that we only lost one panda." Another, named Xiao Xiao, remains missing.

As he spoke, there was a rumbling sound. Huang, in his office with broken windows, rose from his chair and looked up at the hills.

"Aftershock," he said. "We get one every day."

Monday, April 21, 2008

Thursday, April 10, 2008

Sunday, March 16, 2008

Panda makes "Lost" cameo. Indeed.

Sex videos fail to engage pandas


The video is pretty graphic. Qing Qing and Ha Lei tangle and slither about awkwardly on the floor of their panda enclosure.

Their encounter is filmed by one of the keepers. And scientists at the Chengdu Research Base for Giant Panda Breeding now play this mating tape to other pandas in the hope that it will encourage them to do the same.

"Here you can see the female is very co-operative," says reproduction specialist Hou Rong - who is known here as the Goddess of Fertility. She watches the video closely.

The two pandas writhe about for a bit longer. Then they untangle. It may be best to stop male pandas from watching what comes next.

"The female is not co-operative," says Dr Hou laconically.

That is an understatement.

The tape shows the female, Qing Qing, attacking the male, Ha Lei. He runs off to the corner, looking sheepish.

Qing Qing looks angry. Apparently this is normal behaviour for pandas after mating.

Still at least Qing Qing and Ha Lei get their job done. That is quite something.

Crucial timing

Some species cannot seem to stop mating, but pandas cannot seem to start.

Female pandas are only interested in reproducing for two or three days a year. For males it is the same.

Luckily for the survival of the panda species, these days of interest happen to coincide.

Scientists here have to make the most of this brief mating season. There are only around 2,000 pandas left in the world - including about 250 in captivity.

So the trick for everyone here at the Chengdu reserve is to get their pandas together on the right days, and then nudge them along a bit by playing them the video of Qing Qing and Ha Lei.

No one here can remember who came up with the idea - it was possibly a behaviour specialist from abroad, they say.

And there is one problem - no one is sure whether or not the mating tapes make any difference.

"We don't know if its useful for pandas or not," says Dr Hou. "Some pandas are interested. Others are not interested. They prefer to eat or rest - and not pay attention to the video."

So the reserve lets us play the video to the pandas ourselves.

Headache?

We get together a small monitor and some loudspeakers, put some plastic bags onto our shoes and head into a small enclosure.

One panda lies on its back among piles of bamboo leaves. Another is asleep. It does not look like they have mating on their minds.

We set up a small TV screen in front of a seven-year-old female panda called Shu Qing. She is busy crunching her way through an apple.

We play her the tape of Qing Qing and Ha Lei. Shu Qing shows no interest. She is much more concerned about finishing her apple.

After a couple of minutes she glances over at the TV monitor. Then she seems lost in thought. She vaguely waves a paw, but nothing more.

So the video does not appear to work. Perhaps Shu Qing has a headache, or perhaps she just prefers apples to adult videos.

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/asia-pacific/7250657.stm


Swarovski Shows Limited Edition Pandas

Olympics and Pandas: Natural Fit

Beijing to get more pandas for Olympic Games

Special report: 2008 Olympic Games

CHENGDU, March 13 (Xinhua) -- A giant panda breeding center in southwest China's Sichuan Province is loaning the Beijing Zoo up to 10 of the bears during the Olympic Games in August.

Eight to 10 of the animals, described as "strong, lovely and adaptable," are to be chosen by netizens from 16 candidates born in 2006 in the Wolong-based China Giant Panda Protection and Research Center, Li Desheng, the center's deputy director, told Xinhua on Thursday.

The pandas will be on display with seven of their peers at the zoo in Beijing through November.

The zoo has already begun to upgrade its facilities to accommodate the additional animals. It also planned to build a giant panda museum that would document efforts to save the endangered species.

"We would like to take the opportunity of the Olympic Games, when millions of tourists are expected to flow into the national capital, to promote the protection of the rare pandas and their living environment," Li said.

To ensure the animals' health and safety in their new home, Wolong was sending a large group of panda keepers, vets and technicians to help take care of them during their stay.

Li said the exercise was more than just an exhibition, it also emphasized the motivation to "exchange technologies on panda breeding".

"Experts at the Beijing Zoo were artificially breeding giant pandas in 1964, the earliest in China. So it's also a good opportunity to learn from our counterparts."

The pandas' departure date for the capital will be announced at a press conference next week when the voting closes.

Last year, 31 pandas were born at breeding centers around the nation in the first 11 months. A total of 25 survived, according to the State Forestry Administration. The Wolong center welcomed 20 pandas alone with 16 survivals.

The giant panda, known for being sexually inactive, is among the world's most endangered animals due to shrinking habitat.

In November, China had 239 giant pandas in captivity, including128 at the Wolong center. About 1,590 other pandas were thought to be living in China's wilderness, mainly in Sichuan, Gansu and Shaanxi provinces.

http://news.xinhuanet.com/english/2008-03/13/content_7783834.htm

Saturday, March 1, 2008

New Panda Movie!


Jack Black is set to star in Kung Fu Panda, a new movie from DreamWorks debuting on June 6th.

Po the panda is a humble noodle maker who realizes his martial arts dreams when he sets out on a crazy journey.

That's all that I will reveal...visit the site to find out more!

Tuesday, February 26, 2008

Baby panda doing yoga

THE stare


THE stare
Originally uploaded by ucumari

Back to back


Back to back
Originally uploaded by somesai

pet the panda hipster


pretty panda
Originally uploaded by hi caitlin

Panda Express Soft Drinks


Panda Express Soft Drinks
Originally uploaded by celikins

Little Su makes claim to being the cutest panda girl ever.


Panda guitar hero

Panda Rap



White dudez get down to a TI beat. How can I resist?

World of Warcraft panda

Little baby panda tribute video

I'm too cute (or sexy) fowr my fuwr

Get down with your bad self panda.

Ice ice panda


Ice ice panda
Originally uploaded by irrene
Ice ice panda says it all.

Two panda bear cubs in southwest China

Looks like little aliens.

Panda Cub


Panda Cub
Originally uploaded by anitalee

Look at that panda on a horse.

Chocolate panda biscuits


Chocolate panda biscuits
Originally uploaded by +fatman+

Could go for one of these guys right now.

panda soup


pandas..
Originally uploaded by anzyAprico
Yes. Panda in your soup.

Panda bento 10-19-06


Panda bento 10-19-06
Originally uploaded by pkoceres
Looks tasty.

Panda escape!

The Most Pathetic Baby Panda Ever

Kung Fu Panda, starring Jack Black. Not a joke.

Panda attacks some dude like crazy