It is true. There are many Giant Pandas endangered. my project in school is about them so i decided to ask on answer.com what it is
In the 1940s, the Chinese government began conservation efforts to protect the Giant Pandas. In 1963, the China Research & Conservation Center for the Giant Panda at the Wolong Nature Reserve, Sichuan Province, was established.
The giant panda is definitely on the endangered species list.yes they are endangeredyesnoYes they are, but efforts are being made as we speak to save them.
noYes they are, but efforts are being made as we speak to save them.
Giant pandas live in the temperate-zone bamboo forests of central China. One of the rarest animals in the world, they now symbolize endangered species and conservation efforts.
No, it eats bamboo. The Chinese have set up a Panda conservation and research centre at Chengdu and have started a breeding programme.
female giant panda=female giant panda male giant panda=male giant panda baby giant panda=baby giant panda x
The Giant Panda is already protected along with large segments of their habitat. The Giant Panda is listed as "endangered", with the population posted as "decreasing", according to the International Union of Conservation for Nature, or the IUCN Red List. The Giant Panda is protected from hunting, and poaching. They even have guards stationed at some of the sites to help stop damage to their habitat by loggers, also to stop trappers, and unauthorized personnel from gaining access to the Giant Pandas. The Chinese government is working with several groups, such as WWF, to help expand the habitat for the pandas, and to further research and broaden the Giant Panda Conservation programs. For more details, please see the sites listed below.
The Giant Panda is a wild species. The first Giant Panda was born somewhere in the wilds of China, but there isn't a record of the birth. The Giant Panda evolved slowly into the species we know today. It is not a domesticated animal, or just a species bred by humans in a zoo, so there wouldn't be a specific location for the birth of the first Giant Panda. If your asking about the first captive Giant Panda birth though, that is another thing. That is recorded, for it was a large hurdle in the efforts for conservation of the species. The first Giant Panda born in captivity was 1986 in China, in the China Conservation and Research Center for the Giant Panda at Wolong. Of course, Wolong which is located off the Pi Tiao River, just southeast of the Qionglai Mountains, is in China. For more details, please see the sites listed below.
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