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PANDA

France to say ‘bienvenue’ to its first ever panda cub

A French zoo is celebrating the news that its female panda is pregnant meaning France will soon be welcoming its very first cub.

France to say 'bienvenue' to its first ever panda cub
Female panda Huan Huan rests inside her box. Photo: AFP
Delighted French zoo officials were bursting with joy Wednesday at the news their female panda is pregnant — a first for France.
   
A scan by zoo vets on Wednesday revealed that Huan Huan, on loan to Beauval zoo in central France from China along with her male partner Yuan Zi, is expecting her first cub.
   
“It's exceptional. We just exploded in joy as we've been waiting such a long time for this moment,” the zoo's communications director Delphine Delord told AFP.
   
“It also gives us hope for the conservation of pandas, which in nature are in danger of extinction.”
   
The nine-year-old pandas are the only giant pandas living in France, and they arrived in Beauval in 2012 after intense, high-level negotiations between Paris and Beijing.
   
Only 19 zoos around the world, outside  China, have been allowed to house pandas.
   
But breeding pandas, in captivity or in the wild, is notoriously difficult.
 
The female panda is only on heat once a year for about 48 hours.
 
Huan Huan and her beau were brought together in February, with the hope they would mate, but it didn't happen, said Delord.
   
“So we did an artificial insemination,” she added.
   
Since a panda's gestation period is only 50 days, the baby cub is now due on either August 4 or 5, likely weighing in at around just 100 grammes.
   
If all goes well with the pregnancy and birth, the cub will leave Beauval in the next two to three years to be returned to China.
   
Last year, zoo officials had been bitterly disappointed when Huan Huan had a fake pregnancy, a fairly common occurrence among female pandas.

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PANDA

Escaping lockdown: Panda breaks out at Copenhagen Zoo

Humans are not the only ones tiring of confinement during the coronavirus pandemic -- a panda escaped from his enclosure at Copenhagen Zoo on Monday.

Escaping lockdown: Panda breaks out at Copenhagen Zoo
Mads Claus Rasmussen / Ritzau Scanpix / AFP
Xing Er, a six-year-old male panda — soon to be seven — then took a tour of the zoo, which was closed at the time.
   
He was spotted on a surveillance video “leaving his enclosure, slipping under an electric fence”, zoo spokesman Jacob Munkholm Hoeck told AFP.   
 
The animal wandered around the zoo until an employee noticed it and called a security team.
   
“The veterinarian of the zoo anaesthetised the panda and he was brought back to the enclosure,” Hoeck said.
   
“There he was given an antidote and woke up a couple of minutes later.”
   
Xing Er was not harmed and there were no human injuries. 
 
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Bengt Holst, the zoo's chief scientist, said in a statement that security around the enclosure will be “carefully examined” to “make sure (it) doesn't happen again”.
   
Xing Er and his female mate Mao Sun — who did not take part in his escape — arrived in Denmark in April 2019, on loan from the Chinese city of Chengdu.   
 
They are a part of the “panda diplomacy” programme set up by China which consists of lending pandas in order to foster relations with trading partners.
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