What's new in the zoo? We have a baby panda!

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last unicorn

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Berlin zoo might have Knut, Vienna zoo has a new-born baby panda, which is very rare. It's still unnamed and very naked. It's the first panda baby in an European zoo that was conceived the "natural way", most female pandas are only able to conceive with artificial insemination, since they are only ready for conception for about 2 - 4 days a year!

Anyway, here are the first photos made on the day of the little one's birth, August, 23. Here it still looks like a little rat:

pandababy.jpg


Here's the mother Yang Yang shortly after the birth carrying the baby around in her mouth, she's still inside the cave where she gave birth:

panda_cave.jpg


panda01.jpg
 
The two pandas came to Vienna in 2003, it's a real sensation that they have had a baby.

That's what they like to do: Playing, eating bamboo, being lazy:

playingpandas.jpg


panda_lazy.jpg
 
The baby is only about 10 cm long and has the weight of a small chocolate bar. It's totally naked now and is being hidden from the nosy public by the mother for the first few weeks. I cannot wait to see how it grows, becomes furry and someday looks like this:

cutebabypanda01.jpg


littlepanda.jpg


:cute:
 
The interest in Knut has, predictably, become very low, so good on you for your new sensation.
Pandas deserve it. :)
 
Here's the actual story ... :wink:



Panda Gives Surprise Birth in Austria
By VERONIKA OLEKSYN, Associated Press Writer
2 hours ago

VIENNA, Austria - A giant panda on loan from China gave her Austrian zookeepers a surprise Thursday: the first panda cub born in Europe in 25 years.

Caretakers at the Schoenbrunn Zoo detected the cub on a surveillance camera after hearing little squeals coming from an enclosed compound where the mother, Yang Yang, had retreated. Zookeepers had not been certain Yang Yang was pregnant.

A photograph released by the zoo showed Yang Yang, a first-time mother, holding the tiny creature in her mouth and looking up toward the camera.

Zookeepers estimated the cub weighs 3.5 ounces and measures 3.9 inches.

"'Yang Yang' means sunshine, and that's what she is," zoo director Dagmar Schratter told reporters with a broad smile outside the panda enclosure.

The last time pandas were born in Europe was in Madrid in 1982, the zoo said on its Web site. A panda gave birth to twin cubs through artificial insemination.

Mother and cub will remain in the enclosed area for the next two to three months. The cub, whose name will be picked by the Chinese, will likely start crawling in about four months and will probably make its public debut around that time, Schratter said.

The cub was born 127 days after Yang Yang mated with the male panda Long Hui, the zoo said. The two pandas are in Austria on loan from China.

Schratter said an Aug. 6 ultrasound had not shown any signs of the pregnancy but caretakers became suspicious a few days ago when 7-year-old Yang Yang started taking material into the area where she delivered her cub Thursday. She had done so before, however, without giving birth.

Schratter said the pregnancy occurred naturally. Female pandas often are artificially inseminated after they mate to raise the chances of a pregnancy, said Regina Pfistermueller, a zoologist who co-wrote a book about pandas with Schratter.

"We decided to pass on that step," Pfistermueller said.

Cubs are vulnerable at birth, with about a 60 percent survival rate in the first year, Schratter said. She noted it was a good sign that Yang Yang had accepted her offspring, but the zoo had an incubator and artificial milk ready just in case.

Pfistermueller said animals in zoos occasionally reject their young, leaving it up to staff to raise them. That fate was met by Knut, the polar bear cub being raised by zookeepers in Germany.

"This is a good omen, also for the Olympic Games 2008," said Lu Yonghua, China's ambassador to Austria, who went to the zoo to offer his congratulations. Beijing will host next year's Summer Games.

Approximately 1,600 giant pandas live in the wild, according to the World Wide Fund for Nature.

The species' future remains uncertain because its forest habitat in the mountainous areas of southwest China is fragmented and small populations live isolated from each other, the WWF fund's Web site says. Poaching also remains a threat.
 
Thanks a lot, MsMofoGone!

It's strange that no one really knew for sure if she was pregnant, what a surprise!

I hope the little panda makes it through and stays healthy.
 
:cute: How precious

I saw the pandas at the Memphis Zoo last year- one was pregnant a few months ago but she had a miscarriage.

All they did was sit around and eat bamboo but I still couldn't stop looking at them and went back to spend more time there before I left the zoo.
 
Originally posted by last unicorn
Thanks a lot, MsMofoGone!

You're quite welcome, last unicorn !! :wink:
Thanks for starting the thread too. Those pics are absolutely beautiful. :cute:

Originally posted by last unicorn
I hope the little panda makes it through and stays healthy.

Agreed ... it's also good to know that the zookeepers were ready ... just in case, they needed that incubator or milk. :up:

Hopefully, it will all be alright because the mother accepted her offspring. :applaud:
 
One of the San Diego Zoo's pandas gave birth to a naturally conceived cub a few weeks ago; they currently have a 'Panda Cam' set up in the den, and if you're lucky you might catch a glimpse of the cub. There was a documentary aired here in the US about a year ago on captive breeding programs at the Wolong Center in China (the source for most of the world's zoo panda breeding pairs), and one of their biologists said that in his opinion, a major reason why captive male pandas so often seem sexually inhibited and unable to "follow through," even when their partners are in heat, is because zoo panda pairs tend to be raised together in close quarters, playing together daily etc.--which is completely unnatural for them--and thus they come to see each other somewhat like 'family,' which may inhibit the males' response to what should otherwise be the irresistible stimulus of a female in heat. Looks like it worked out well for Yang Yang and Long Hui though. :)

I'm surprised the keepers were handling the cub already--normally they don't go anywhere near them for the first few weeks. Also I thought they were usually completely hairless at birth...are you sure that first pic is of this cub?
 
Last edited:
yolland said:
One of the San Diego Zoo's pandas gave birth to a naturally conceived cub a few weeks ago; they currently have a 'Panda Cam' set up in the den, and if you're lucky you might catch a glimpse of the cub. There was a documentary aired here in the US about a year ago on captive breeding programs at the Wolong Center in China (the source for most of the world's zoo panda breeding pairs), and one of their biologists said that in his opinion, a major reason why captive male pandas so often seem sexually inhibited and unable to "follow through," even when their partners are in heat, is because zoo panda pairs tend to be raised together in close quarters, playing together daily etc.--which is completely unnatural for them--and thus they come to see each other somewhat like 'family,' which may inhibit the males' response to what should otherwise be the irresistible stimulus of a female in heat. Looks like it worked out well for Yang Yang and Long Hui though. :)

I'm surprised the keepers were handling the cub already--normally they don't go anywhere near them for the first few weeks. Also I thought they were usually completely hairless at birth...are you sure that first pic is of this cub?

You're right, there is a camera in the den to watch the baby.

I'm not sure the first picture is of this actual panda baby, it's what was on the zoo's website and published in our national media, so maybe it's just a photo of how a panda baby looks at birth, still very tiny though. I'm not sure that's really hair, might be some kind of fluff they have at birth.
But the two pictures of the panda mother holding her baby in the mouth are definitely from the day of its birth, because they were obviously made by the "surveillance" camera in the den.
Makes sense that she wouldn't allow anyone to handle the baby at such an early stage.

Good to hear about the San Diego zoo! :up:
 
Last unicorn, What a great post. The photos are precious. Great info, too. My daughters' favorite animal is the panda. She collects all things panda. They are a unique and beautiful animal.

VincentVega-
We also love Knut- and kept up with the news about him. I guess those sick naturists gave up the fight to leave him alone and let "nature" take its' course, rather than have him rescued and taken care of. How is he doing, we don't see any updates about him...
 
He is out all day now, and is doing quite well as far as I know.
meegannie has some recent pictures of him in her photobucket. She posted a link on the fifth page of the "INTERFERENCERS Photos Consolidated XXII" thread.
 
We have a new lion cub in Belfast zoo! Here's the story:

One of the world's rarest big cats is returning to Belfast Zoo after being hand reared by a keeper.

Baby Barbary lion Lily was rescued from her zoo enclosure in June after she was rejected by her mother Fidda at birth, and reared by keeper Linda Frew in her home.

Baby Barbary Lion Lily, who's now back with the lions in Belfast Zoo

A second lion cub born in the litter wasn't so lucky. It was killed by its mother - but Lily escaped with only a few scratches after keepers stepped in and removed her from the lion enclosure.

The pair of cubs were the first Barbary lions ever born in Ireland - to the delight of staff at the zoo.

The sub-species is extinct in the wild and only around 40 animals remain in the European captive population, cared for by 12 zoos across the world.

At birth Lily weighed 1.4 kilos and was 37cm in length, just longer than a standard ruler. Lily's birth expands the Barbary lion group at Belfast Zoo to four.

In the crucial weeks after birth, Lily was cared for round the clock by keeper Linda Frew, who endured countless sleepless nights to feed the tiny cub every two hours.

"Fidda had two lion cubs and she rejected both. She killed one and we were able to get Lily out before she harmed her," she said.

"It is quite usual with the first litter. Even in the wild that would happen, but at least we managed to save this one."

Lily was fed 20ml of milk every two hours and progressed to 40ml within just two weeks. She was weaned onto solid food at six weeks, when she consumed a pound of mince every other day.

"For the first six weeks she stayed in our bedroom. Then we moved her into the conservatory with a baby monitor and a heat lamp to keep her warm. At nine weeks we brought her back to the zoo," Linda said

" She's a lovely wee thing but you have to remember she's a lion - all of a sudden you could feel the strength coming in, the muscles starting to develop and the scratches were starting to break the skin."

Lily brought a new companion back to the zoo with her - Keepa, a Japanese Akita dog, who will help her grow up with animal traits and behaviours and not those of her foster mother.

"He will be there until the stage when she's bigger than him. At the moment he's getting the upper hand but when she starts getting the upper hand, within six months to a year, he'll come back to me," Linda said.

"It seems to be working quite well. She's starting to behave more like a lion and she's starting to get more aggressive, which is what you want."

Lily has yet to go on public display at the zoo but visitors will be able to see her from mid- September.

Lily will be the star of two forthcoming TV programmes, the first of which, Living with Lily, airs on UTV at 8pm on Monday.

The second programme will be shown on the Discovery channel, probably in early 2008.

4kk1xzk.jpg


lilyportrait.jpg
 
You can't do that he's a live bear, he will literally rip your face off.
 
Aaaah that is so exciting. I love the Tiergarten, and especially the pandas. They are such amazing animals.

Though the polar bears there look so sad in the summer months.
 
There was a TV documentary about panda babies earlier this week, it showed some footage about the new baby in Vienna zoo (however, there are no really new pictures because the baby is still hidden by the mother) and some very interesting (and verrry cute) stuff about a panda center in China, where also our "Viennese" pandas came from and where the little one will return in about 3 years.

The little newborn panda is still blind and naked and can do nothing on it's own, not even pee! They also said that there was a second panda baby, but they found it dead in the den, it was born too early and was too small to survive. I hadn't known that panda twins are usually a problem, because the mother tends to take on only one of the babies and rejects the other. In the film they showed how, in China, the zoo's medical team tried to help a panda twin pair to survive by raising it together with the mother for the first weeks. In the end, it was really touching how, after several failed attempts, they finally managed to unite both panda babies with the mother, who took them on eventually.
 
Our little panda has been out of the den with its mother for the first time today. The black and white fur is already beginning to show, but it is still very little (about 30 cm). There is no name yet for the baby and they still don't know the little one's gender.

New pictures:

pandababy_neu1.jpg


pandababy_neu2.jpg
 
There's a new cub at the San Diego Zoo as well ...



http://www.comcast.net/data/news/photoshow/html/news/763724.html


Panda Cub Born at San Diego Zoo Is Girl
By Associated Press
3 hours ago

SAN DIEGO - The San Diego Zoo's newest panda cub is a girl.

Zoo veterinarians said they determined the 6-week-old panda's sex after conducting a recent exam.

"She is developing right along schedule," zoo spokeswoman Meg Sutherland-Smith said.

The cub is the fourth giant panda born at the zoo, all of them to 16-year-old Bai Yun. The father, Gao Gao, also fathered her two previous cubs.

Following Chinese tradition, the panda cub will receive a name after she is 100 days old.

Only about 1,600 giant pandas remain in the wild, and fewer than 180 live in captivity.
 
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