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Pandas rebounding, but their habitat isn't: study
By Mari�tte Le Roux
Paris (AFP) Sept 25, 2017


High hopes for Australian bid to breed panda cubs
Sydney (AFP) Sept 25, 2017 - A giant panda couple struggling to produce cubs in an Australian zoo have been given a helping hand by vets who hope to overcome the bears' notorious breeding difficulties with three artificial inseminations.

Fu Ni and Wang Wang arrived in Adelaide from China in late 2009 as part of a programme aimed at breeding the Southern Hemisphere's first baby pandas.

But attempts at mating and artificial insemination have so far failed to impregnate Fu Ni, with the species' short annual breeding period -- typically just 36 hours between February and May -- proving too small a window.

Vets at Adelaide Zoo worked feverishly over the weekend with a reproductive specialist from China to complete the three procedures, which they say have given the couple their best-ever chance of having a cuddly cub.

"We've had a busy couple of days working round the clock to maximise the chance of a positive result," senior vet Ian Smith said Monday.

This is the fourth attempt to artificially inseminate Fu Ni and it will not be known until about two weeks prior to her potentially giving birth if it has been successful. Gestation can take between 50 and 160 days.

Giant pandas are notoriously clumsy at mating, with males said to be bad at determining when a female is in the right frame of mind and often befuddled at knowing what to do next.

In the event the animals do feel compatible, sex is frequently over too quickly to impregnate the female.

Only some 1,864 pandas remain in the wild, mainly in China's Sichuan province. A further 370 live in captivity in breeding programs around the world.

Giant pandas have a famously low reproductive rate, a key factor along with habitat loss in their status as vulnerable on the International Union for Conservation of Nature's Red List of threatened species.

Births in captivity are rare, but a cub was born at a Japanese zoo in June, while a French zoo welcomed its first-ever baby panda last month.

Blooming lovely! Japan zoo names baby panda after fragrant flowers
Tokyo (AFP) Sept 25, 2017 - A panda cub born in a Japanese zoo three months ago has been christened "Xiang Xiang" to evoke the image of a blooming flower, Tokyo governor Yuriko Koike said Monday.

After showing a video clip of the baby panda being hugged by proud mum Shin Shin, Koike explained that the name Xiang Xiang -- derived from the Chinese character for "fragrance" -- was chosen from among more than 320,000 suggestions from the public.

The naming of Xiang Xiang threatened to overshadow strong speculation that Prime Minister Shinzo Abe would call a snap election. It provided welcome light relief after weeks of tension over North Korean nuclear tests and missile launches.

Shin Shin gave birth at Tokyo's Ueno zoo on June 12, when Xiang Xiang weighed a fragile 100 grams and was tiny enough to fit into a human palm.

Shin Shin, who mated with Ri Ri in February, had previously given birth in 2012 -- the zoo's first panda delivery in 24 years -- only for the cub to die from pneumonia six days later.

Zookeepers have since given the pandas some private space in a bid to create an environment for the bashful creatures to mate successfully -- a notoriously difficult process.

Until recently considered an endangered species, it is estimated that around 2,000 giant pandas remain in the wild, in three provinces in central China.

China's fiercely protected giant panda had a smaller habitat in 2013 than when it was declared endangered more than 20 years earlier, researchers said Monday.

What living space they had was much more fragmented, and often in areas under threat from earthquakes, road construction, tourism or global warming, they wrote in the journal Nature Ecology & Evolution.

Last year, the International Union for the Conservation of Nature (IUCN) moved the giant panda from the "endangered" to the less-threatened "vulnerable" category on its species Red List.

But the iconic black-and-white bear is not out of the woods yet, according to the new study.

"We are not arguing with the IUCN assessment that the panda is less threatened now than in the past," study co-author Stuart Pimm of Duke University in Durham, North Carolina, told AFP.

"There is much good news about the panda -- its numbers are up, much more of its habitat is protected, deforestation has stopped," he said by email.

But "while there is some good news, there is also bad news: the panda habitat is much more fragmented than in the past and small fragments may not hold viable populations of pandas."

The panda's conservation status is a barometer of global conservation efforts, according to the study's authors.

The IUCN's assessment, they added, was based "solely" on population numbers, "while ignoring emerging threats".

"Our results show a more complicated picture that warns against complacency" in conservation efforts, the team wrote.

- High risk -

The researchers used satellite data collected over four decades to evaluate the giant panda habitat from 1976 to 2013.

Suitable panda living space decreased by nearly five percent until 2001, but increased by 0.4 percent from then to 2013, they found.

Initial losses have not been offset.

Compared with 1988, when the IUCN listed the panda as "rare" -- equivalent to "endangered" in a later update of the Red List categories -- its habitat in 2013 was 1.7 percent smaller, the authors said.

Commercial logging was the most harmful activity to panda habitat, the team said, but the creation of nature reserves "significantly" slowed the loss of living space.

The first reserves were created in the 1960s, and 67 were established by 2013.

Yet there are many remaining risks, including that giant pandas live in one of the most tectonically active regions of China.

"In the past, pandas had a much larger range across China, so while earthquakes are natural events, their impacts may now be disproportionately severe," the authors wrote.

Road construction is another driver of habitat loss and fragmentation, while tourism has increased throughout the panda's range.

And climate change risks altering the distribution of bamboo, the panda's main food source, the team said.

"The panda population is divided into 30 isolated groups across the six mountain regions comprising their range," they added. Of these, 18 groups had 10 or fewer individual animals.

"They face a high risk of local extinction".

The researchers argued for the expansion of nature reserves and the building of "corridors" to connect isolated populations.

FLORA AND FAUNA
Snow leopards no longer 'endangered,' conservationists rule
Washington (UPI) Sep 14, 2017
Scientists at the International Union for Conservation of Nature have taken snow leopards off the Red List. According to the IUCN, snow leopards are no longer "endangered." Now, the predatory cats are considered "vulnerable," a less severe classification. The snow leopard first joined the Red List in 1972, but the species' numbers have stabilized over the last four-plus decades. ... read more

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