
Certain website features will not operate correctly with Javascript disabled. Depending mainly on a diet of bamboo, giant pandas live in western China.

WWF has been active in giant panda conservation since 1980 and was the first international conservation organization to work in China at the Chinese government’s invitation.
Giant panda series#
Our Disease Investigations team is currently hosting a series of workshops in China aimed at improving giant panda health and disease management.Login to your WWF-Canada supporter centre. We have provided training and capacity building for more than 40 Chinese biologists and animal care specialists, zoo personnel around the world, and dozens of students and volunteers. Our Recovery Ecology team is collaborating with San Diego Zoo wildlife care staff to determine the hearing range and sensitivity of pandas to understand and mediate noise disturbance for pandas in our care, and those living in the wilderness adjacent to expanding human activities. Our work at the Zoo includes experiments to study the role of olfactory communication, and detailed observations of reproduction and male-female interactions. Later, we collaborated with Chinese colleagues on the first giant panda genome assembly using next-generation sequencing technology. This groundbreaking study led to a complete analysis of the giant panda studbook population and identification of paternity for many cubs. Ya-ping Zhang undertook the first population genetic studies of giant pandas in our Conservation Genetics lab. For the first time, the possibility of reintroducing pandas into the wild is being discussed. The multidisciplinary scientific approach spearheaded by our Reproductive Sciences team has led to the birth and survival of six cubs at the San Diego Zoo and a dramatic turnaround in the breeding program at the Wolong Breeding Center, where panda numbers have increased from 25 to over 130 in 10 years. Research at the Wolong Breeding Center on the timing of ovulation, artificial insemination, early pregnancy detection, birth, maternal care, and cub development is applied to monitoring panda reproductive cycles and improving management following conception. We are working with our partners to help recover wild populations and remove obstacles to panda reproduction. We are studying how this limits population size and how we can address it. There are only an estimated 1,860 adult giant pandas currently living in the wild with almost 70 percent of them in state nature reserves. In areas where old-growth trees have been logged, the remaining trees are too small to serve as suitable birthing dens for pandas. At Foping Nature Reserve, our Recovery Ecology field crew is studying mating behavior, dispersal, denning ecology, health status, and the effects of human disturbance.

We are the only team monitoring giant pandas in the wild using GPS satellite telemetry and remote camera traps. Our conservation program for giant pandas is aimed at designing effective management strategies to ensure the survival of this iconic species. Threats to Survival: Habitat loss and fragmentation Conservation Status: IUCN Red List - Vulnerable
