Foreign-born pandas join China’s efforts to boost wild population

Foreign-born pandas join China’s efforts to boost wild population

Foreign-born pandas like US-born Bei Bei are joining China's efforts to boost the wild population of the bears

Foreign-born pandas like US-born Bei Bei are joining China’s efforts to boost the wild population of the bears.

After years of charming millions of people around the world with their furry bodies and clumsy antics, foreign-born giant pandas are adapting to new lives in China.

The fluffy envoys are loaned to overseas zoos as part of Beijing’s “panda diplomacy”, with the offspring returned to China within a few years of their birth to join breeding programs.

And as they sit among leafy surrounds in conservation centers in southwest China chomping on bamboo, they are oblivious to their diplomatic roles—or the crucial part they could play in saving their species from extinction.

“Our work is very intense and very urgent and we need to replenish the wild panda populations (with those) in captivity,” Zhang Hemin, chief expert at the China Conservation and Research Center for the Giant Panda (CCRCGP), told reporters during a recent press tour.

Behind him, US-born panda Bei Bei sorted through shoots of bamboo with his paws as he sat inside his exhibit at the Ya’an base in Sichuan province.

“After the fourth national giant panda census, we found that our wild population has formed 33 giant populations, but 22 of these populations are relatively small in number,” he explained.

“If we don’t help them, they may be at risk of extinction in the next 30 to 50 years.”

Habitat loss

Pandas, native to mountain ranges in Sichuan, Shaanxi and Gansu provinces, were first placed in capacity in the 1980s to save them from starvation, Dujiangyan Reintroduction and Breeding Research Center’s Qi Dunwu said.

Pandas eat bamboo at the conservation centre in Ya’an. Since 2003, 12 captive pandas have been released into the wild, with 10 surviving.

Most were later released, but a breeding program has since seen the captive population swell to more than 700, according to Zhang.

Since 2003, Qi said 12 captive pandas—11 from CCRCGP and one from a separate agency—have been released into the wild, with 10 surviving.

But the COVID pandemic saw the rewilding efforts put on hold for five years.

And apart from preparing the mammals for the dangers of living in the wild, authorities need to ensure they are sent to habitats with sufficient bamboo and space, Qi added.

There are an estimated 1,860 giant pandas left in the wild, according to environmental group WWF.

But the animals, which were removed from the International Union for Conservation of Nature’s endangered species list in 2016, still face serious threats from loss of habitat and fragmentation.

Officials are working on linking habitats to allow for pandas to mingle and breed, with more than 40 nature reserves now grouped together to form the Giant Panda National Park covering nearly 22,000 square kilometers (8,500 square miles).

Star attractions

The conservation efforts are partly funded by foreign zoos, which pay China millions of dollars under multi-year agreements to loan pandas.

Ran Ran feeds her cub in their enclosure at the Ya’an conservation and research center. There are an estimated 1,860 giant pandas left in the wild, according to WWF.

The zoos hope the bears become star attractions that draw in more visitors, while China benefits from projecting a softer image.

But at the same time, the ebb and flow of diplomatic relations has seen Beijing recently recall several pandas after their loans expired.

Britain’s only pandas, Tian Tian and Yang Guang, left Scotland in December after 12 years without cubs.

And three pandas at Washington’s National Zoo took a one-way trip back to China in November.

Some are leaving China: Beijing said in February it had signed agreements to send pandas to San Diego, and two will return to Washington before the end of 2024.

In Ya’an, Netherlands-born panda Fan Xing, who flew to China in September, napped in her exhibit as keeper Li Xiaoyan looked on.

Fan Xing, born in May 2022, has slowly adjusted to her new diet and surroundings—including learning how to understand Chinese.

“When they first come back, we’ll speak a little bit of English to the English-speaking ones, and then we’ll slowly change into speaking Chinese,” she told AFP.

“In this process, we need to raise it with love and care, and build up a good relationship with the keepers.”

© 2024 AFP

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