The giant panda has an insatiable appetite
for bamboo. A typical animal eats half the day—a full 12 out of every 24
hours—and relieves itself dozens of times a day. It takes 28 pounds of
bamboo to satisfy a giant panda's daily dietary needs, and it hungrily
plucks the stalks with elongated wrist bones that function rather like
thumbs. Pandas will sometimes eat birds or rodents as well.
Wild pandas live only in remote, mountainous regions in central
China. These high bamboo forests are cool and wet—just as pandas like
it. They may climb as high as 13,000 feet to feed on higher slopes in
the summer season. Pandas are often seen eating in a relaxed sitting posture, with their
hind legs stretched out before them. They may appear sedentary, but
they are skilled tree-climbers and efficient swimmers.
Giant pandas are solitary. They have a highly developed sense of
smell that males use to avoid each other and to find females for mating
in the spring. After a five-month pregnancy, females give birth to a cub
or two, though they cannot care for both twins. The blind infants weigh
only 5 ounces at birth and cannot crawl until they reach three months
of age. They are born white, and develop their much loved coloring
later. Improved conservation efforts and better survey methods
show an increase in the wild panda population. Hundreds more pandas
live in breeding centers and zoos, where they are always among the most
popular attractions. Much of what we know about pandas comes from
studying these zoo animals, because their wild cousins are so rare and
elusive.

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