Four giant pandas to call high-altitude plateau home

2019-06-05 08:11:33 China Daily Li Yan

An airport worker transfers a giant panda at Caojiapu International Airport in Xining, capital city of Northwest China's Qinghai province, June 3, 2019. (Photo/Xinhua)

Two 3-year-old female giant pandas will arrive in Xining, Qinghai province, on Wednesday to join two other pandas, completing the first group of the animals to call the high-altitude plateau home.

Qiguo and Yuanman will join the other two from the Chengdu Research Base of Giant Panda Breeding that arrived on Monday to stay for three years in the Qinghai-Tibet Plateau Wildlife Zoo.

With the approval of the National Forestry and Grassland Administration, the zoo signed an agreement with the Chengdu base to borrow the four pandas to be exhibited in the zoo.

The cost of borrowing a panda is 250,000 yuan ($36,174) a year.

The cost is relatively low because the base cares more about educating locals, who would not otherwise have an opportunity to see pandas, about conservation of endangered species, said base chief Zhang Zhihe.

Wu Kongju, a panda expert at the base, believes that the four pandas can adapt to the plateau. Wild pandas live 1,500 to 3,500 meters above sea level. The zoo in Xining is 2,300 meters above sea level, Wu said.

The altitude is almost the same as that of a base for training captive pandas to live in the wild in Yingjing county, Sichuan province.

Pandas from the Chengdu base feel at home in Yingjing, frolicking, foraging for food and seeking out a place to sleep, Wu said.

Before the arrival of Qiguo and Yuanman, Hexing, a 6-year-old male, and Shuangxin, an 8-year-old female, have already been making themselves at home on the plateau.

Hexing and Shuangxin will live separately in the Xining zoo as they are adults. Adults pandas stay together only during the mating season.

Juvenile bears Qiguo and Yuanman, who will occupy the same den, have lived together since birth and get along well, Wu said. The purpose of lending pandas of different ages is to let locals know the animals at different life stages, she said.

Fresh bamboo and bamboo shoots will be transported from Chengdu to Xining twice a week.

Bamboo south of the Yangtze River is different from that north of the river. Wu said the few bamboo species north of the river are not very palatable to pandas.

It is not unusual for zoos that can afford it to transport bamboo from other regions. The Calgary Zoo in Canada has imported bamboo from China, she said.

Public education and awareness of endangered animal conservation from visiting pandas is more important than the cost of bamboo transport, she said.

The Qinghai-Tibet Plateau Wildlife Zoo, the only such facility on the Qinghai-Tibet Plateau, has a 9,000-square-meter panda facility.

Nine zookeepers trained at the Chengdu base will take care of the four pandas.

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