Global Times

Zoo waits for panda mating

- Xinhua Photo: AFP

The staff and visitors to Copenhagen Zoo have pooled their resources in recent days to encourage Xing Er, a male giant panda, to mate with his lady, Mao Sun, for the third time in as many years. Expectatio­ns are running increasing­ly high for the birth of a panda baby on Danish soil.

Despite the intermitte­nt rain showers, hordes of panda enthusiast­s gathered at the zoo’s panda enclosure early on Sunday to witness the moment.

“I am as excited as pretty much the rest of the Copenhagen Zoo to see whether it will succeed or not,” visitor Magnus Lauesgaard told the Xinhua News Agency.

“We are aware that seeing giant pandas being intimate or close to each other is extremely rare. So, it’s very special for me and my family too,” said Lauesgaard.

To avoid natural aggression towards each other, the two pandas live very separate lives during the year.

After detecting that Mao Sun had been “in heat” since Sunday, the zoo officials decided it was time to put the pandas together because it was likely that they would be more agreeable to one another.

Furthermor­e, the zoo performed a special “trick” to stimulate Xing Er’s sense of competitio­n by sprinkling the urine of other male pandas borrowed from other European countries around the enclosure.

“We saw a lack of interest in Xing Er in 2021, so now we tried to create a false sense of competitio­n.

We sprayed the urine and we have actually seen that the male is more active and more aggressive toward the female, which is probably a good thing,” explained Mads Bertelsen, head of animal operations at the Copenhagen Zoo.

The audience was not disappoint­ed by the couple’s initial interactio­n, as they performed a classic panda courting ritual, standing up and facing each other, playfully chasing each other and tumbling around.

There was a time that Xing Er even bit Mao Sun’s neck provocativ­ely.

However, the anticipate­d consummati­on of the mating procedure did not take place.

After a few hours, there appeared to be disagreeme­nt between the two pandas, causing concern among the onlookers.

“Well, right now it’s not that good looking because she’s not so up to him.

But we don’t know, and I really hope,” said visitor Elisabeth Casanova.

Because female pandas ovulate only once a year and for a maximum of two days, there was still a slim chance that the pair will mate on Monday.

“If it still doesn’t work, then we will basically go back to the drawing board, go back to our Chinese collaborat­ors and talk about what we might change for next year [ 2023] because the panda only has one shot at it every year,” explained

Mads Bertelsen.

The two pandas, Xing Er and Mao Sun, have been a veritable cultural phenomenon across the country since they were moved to the zoo’s panda house in April 2019. In 2017, the Chinese Associatio­n of Zoological Gardens and Denmark’s Copenhagen Zoo signed an agreement on Giant Panda Conservati­on, where the two pandas would be sent to the Copenhagen Zoo lasting for 15 years.

Pandas Xing Er ( male) and Mao Sun are seen in the Copenhagen Zoo on April 24, 2021.

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