China Daily

Good news for pandas: 4 pairs spotted in Q1

- Wang Xiaoyu contribute­d to this story.

Four wild giant panda cubs were spotted at different times strolling around with their mothers in a nature reserve in northweste­rn China in recent months, authoritie­s said on Sunday.

Infrared cameras in the Baishuijia­ng National Nature Reserve in Gansu province caught four panda cubs trailing behind their mothers and learning survival skills, such as foraging, in the first quarter of this year.

It was the latest identifica­tion of new panda cubs in the area, which has the largest population of wild giant pandas among China’s 67 nature reserves.

The fourth national survey on giant pandas, released in 2015, said there were 110 wild pandas living in the Baishuijia­ng area. A total of 1,864 lived in China.

The Baishuijia­ng nature reserve has employed infrared cameras since 2012 to monitor giant pandas, but this is the first time that four pairs of pandas have been spotted.

“In the past, we found one pair every quarter at most,” said He Liwen, director of the Baishuijia­ng reserve. The cubs’ body sizes suggested that two of them were a year and a half old, while the other two were almost 2 years old.

“The four pairs were caught in different places remote from each other. It’s very easy to see the difference­s,” he said. “So we can be sure of the number.”

Baishuijia­ng staff members also spotted rare wildlife, including golden monkeys, Asian golden cats and gazelles.

The reserve director attributed the good news to the government’s emphasis on protecting the ecosystem and local residents’ efforts to preserve the natural panda habitat over many years.

“It’s a process of consistent, incrementa­l progress,” He said.

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