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In nature, everything is connected. A bacterium affects a tree which affects the air which affects a giant panda. The same is true with knowledge. Learning about giant pandas can lead one to learn about bamboo which can lead one to learn about forests in China which can lead one to learn about the world as a whole.


Giant pandas live in China.

Find out where China is.

Find out how far you live from China.

Learn about the Sichuan Province of China.

Visit China's Embassy online.

View some beautiful Chinese art.

China is one of the world’s most populous countries. Learn about different countries' population sizes.

The other U.S. zoos that have giant pandas are: the San Diego Zoo, Zoo Atlanta, and the Memphis Zoo.

Examine the geology of another group of mountains in Asia:

The Himalayas

The Tibetan Plateau

Did you know giant pandas are members of the bear family?

Read ZooGoer magazine's special edition on bears.

The International Association for Bear Research and Management

The American Zoo and Aquarium Association Bear Advisory Group

Here are bears you can cuddle.

Giant pandas have a bony projection of the wrist bone that they use in the same way primates use their opposable thumbs. Find out how important opposable thumbs are to primates by doing this experiment.

Bamboo makes up 99 percent of the giant panda’s diet.

Visit the American Bamboo Society to learn more about this giant grass.

Eat like the giant panda. Learn to cook with bamboo.

Giant pandas spend 10 to 16 hours a day eating. Some people think humans should spend that much time eating.

Learn about the koala, another animal that eats only one kind of food.

And the sloth bear, another bear that mostly eats only one type of food.

Giant pandas have huge molar teeth specialized for chewing tough bamboo.

Baleen whales also have specialized teeth.

The black fur surrounding the eyes is called an eyespot. Some scientists believe these spots are meant to threaten or scare off other giant pandas. Look at some other animals that have eyespots:

Caligo butterfly

Copperbanded Butterflyfish

Giant pandas first came to the National Zoo in 1972, shortly after President Richard Nixon’s historic visit to China.

The Wolong Nature Reserve in China is home to many of the world’s giant pandas. Learn about Wolong and the other animals that live there:

Species lists

There are many other animals that share the giant panda’s habitat:

takinTakins

Serows

Golden snub-nosed monkeys

Musk deer

Pallas cats

Clouded leopards

Wolves

Asiatic black bears

Tigers once lived in this region but have since been extirpated. See the Tiger Information Center.

Rhododendrons are common in giant panda habitat, and are also found here in the eastern U.S.

Summer means monsoon season in the mountains of China. Learn about the Asian monsoon:

PBS Online

One important method of communication among giant pandas is through chemicals called pheromones released by large glands near their tails. Humans may also release these powerful yet elusive chemicals.

Giant pandas also communicate using sound.

Links to Some of the National Zoo's Giant Panda Research and Conservation Collaborators:

U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service

San Diego Zoo

Zoo Atlanta

World Wildlife Fund

Conservation Breeding Specialist Group

American Zoo and Aquarium Association

Links to the National Zoo's and Friends of the National Zoo's Major Giant Panda Sponsors:

Fujifilm
Giant Panda Program Sponsor

Discovery Communications Inc./Animal Planet
Media Sponsor

FedEx

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