Download - Giant Pandas
Giant PandasGiant PandasBy Sarah PooleBy Sarah Poole
IntroductionIntroduction
I chose Giant Pandas as my chosen topic for my project because they are my favourite animal.
• Giant Pandas are native to central-Western and South Western China
• They are an endangered species from causes like poaching and deforestation
• Habitat and food source are destroyed and they are poached for their fur coat
Pandas live on a diet that consists of 99% Bamboo. They have also been known to eat:
• Other grasses• Wild Tubers • Or even meat in the form of Birds, Rodents or Carrion
In captivity, foods Pandas may receive are:• Honey• Eggs• Fish• Yams• Shrub leaves• Oranges or Bananas with Special prepared
feed
• The average Giant Panda eats as much as 9 to 14kg (20 to 30 pounds) of bamboo shoots a day
©Photo by Jeff Kubina
More on what Giant More on what Giant Pandas eatPandas eat
Giant Panda Statistics Giant Panda Statistics
• Adult Pandas measure around 1.2 to 1.8 meters (4 to 6 ft) in length
• Male Giant Pandas can weigh up to 160 kilograms (350 lb)
• Female Giant Pandas can weigh as little as 75 kilograms (170 lb) but can also weigh up to 125 kilograms (280 lb)
• Newborn Panda cubs only weigh 100 to 200 grams (3 1⁄2 to 7 oz)
• Newborn Panda cubs are 15 to 17 centimetres (6 to 7 in) in length
• The Giant Panda typically lives around 20 years in the wild and around 30 in captivity
Population of Pandas Population of Pandas from 1974 to 2011 in the from 1974 to 2011 in the
wildwild
1974 – Estimated from 1,000 to 1,100 Giant
Pandas in the wild.
1974
2006 – DNA analysis estimates 2,000 to 3,000 Pandas living
in the wild.
2007 – 239 Pandas kept in captivity in
China.27 Kept in captivity
outside China.
2007 - Estimate 1,590 Pandas
living in the wild
2004 – 1,600 Pandas. This is
40% more than in the 1980’s in the
wild.
2011
1977 – Also estimated from 1,000 to 1,100 Giant Pandas
living in the wild.
2011 – About 1,600 still in the
wild
1985 to 1988 – 1,000 Pandas thought to be
living in the wild.
Population of Giant Population of Giant Pandas in the wildPandas in the wild
0
500
1000
1500
2000
2500
Population Number
1974 1977 2004 2006 2007
Year
Population of Giant Pandasin the Wild
WWF and PandasWWF and Pandas
The WWF’s (World Wide Fund for Nature) goal is to stop the degradation of the planets natural environment.
In Qinling, WWF’s vision for 2012 is:• That the Panda population will increase by at least 10% • Its protected habitats will increase by at least 80%
WWF have set the following targets for within the next 10 to 20 years in Minshan:
• 5% increase in forest cover• 30% expansion of the Panda habitat• Reconnection of all Giant Panda habitats in region• No further decline of the Giant Panda population
Names for the PandaNames for the Panda
The Chinese have given the Panda Bear around 20 different names, the four most popular being :-
• Spotted Bear• Bamboo Bear• Large Bear Cat• Bear Cat
These names might have been inspired by the Giant Panda’s eyes.
Where normal bears have round pupils the Giant Panda has vertical cat-like slits.
Enemies of the PandaEnemies of the Panda Animals that prey on the Panda are:• Jackals• Yellow-Throated Marten (Relative of the Weasel) • LeopardsJackals and the Yellow-Throated Marten’s mainly prey on the
Pandas’ cubs.Although the Panda has few natural enemies it tends to avoid
confrontation.
Credit to AuthorsCredit to AuthorsPicture/Text Picture/Text ©© Author Author
Information on second and third slide
©Wikipedia.org and ©wwf.panda.org
Panda on slide 3 eating bamboo ©Photo by Jeff Kubina
Picture of a panda on slide 4 ©Photo by Sheilalau
Information on slide 5 and 6 – Timeline and graph
©Wikipedia.org and ©wwf.panda.org
WWF Panda logo on slide 7 and information
©Photo by mag3737 Tom Magliery©wwf.panda.org
Picture of Panda and information on slide 8
©Photo by San Diego Shooter Nathan Rupert©Wikipedia.org
Images on slide 9 – Jackal, Yellow-Throated Marten, Snow Leopard, information
Photos by ©RayMorris1, ©belgianchocolate, ©fatedsnowfox©wwf.panda.org