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Star panda turns one in US zoo

www.chinanews.cn 2006-07-11 09:20:03

(Source: China Daily)

Tai Shan (R) and his mother Mei Xiang, take a close look at a frozen
treat that was made for him on his first birthday, July 9, 2006, in the
outdoor panda exhibit at the National Zoo in Washington. The frozen
melange was filled with apples, yams, carrots and fruit juices. More than
1.2 million have visited the panda exhibit since the cub first went on
display last December. [AP Photo]

July 11 - One year ago, he was nearly hairless, pink and weighed 113
grams. On his first birthday, giant panda Tai Shan is an active,
25.4-kilogram cub and the star attraction of the National Zoo in
Washington.
"He's like a rambunctious little toddler that loves to get into
everything," Suzan Murray, the zoo's chief veterinarian, said on Sunday.
Murray has monitored every development benchmark for the panda since his
birth on July 9, 2005. Those included the opening of his eyes, the
development of his distinctive markings, his heartbeat, his mobility, and
even the frequency of his squeals, grunts and barks.
Under the agreement with China that allowed the National Zoo to bring two
adult pandas to the US for breeding, the cub must be available for
shipment to China at 2 years of age to become part of breeding efforts to
preserve the endangered species.
The cub still nurses, but he has advanced from milk provided by his
mother, Mei Xiang, to eating bamboo. The woody perennial grass is the
staple of adult pandas' diets, accounting for more than 90 per cent of
their nutrition.
"My next challenge is weaning Tai Shan from his mum," said Lisa Stevens,
the zoo's curator of pandas and primates.
For his birthday, staffers prepared a giant fruitsicle for the cub, a
frozen melange of apples, yams, carrots and fruit juices. That is a
favourite of Mei Xiang's, but this was the first prepared for the growing
cub.
Tai Shan, whose name means peaceful mountain, routinely awakens before
daybreak. After a meal, the mother and cub are often seen wrestling. Tai
Shan also rolls around in the outdoor paddock and climbs trees,
delighting zoo visitors.
More than 1.2 million have visited the panda exhibit since the cub went
on display last December, and more than 21 million people have linked to
the panda cam website.
Tai Shan is aware of the scent of his father, Tian Tian, in a separate
exhibit, and they are often in visual proximity of each other, but they
do not look at each other at all, said Stevens.
"In the wild, males play no role in the rearing of cubs, so there's no
reason for there to be any recognition of who this strange neighbour's
scent mark belongs to," said Stevens.
Only about 1,600 giant pandas remain in the wild, and fewer than 180 live
in captivity. Zoo officials hope their Chinese counterparts will allow
the cub to remain in the United States until it nears breeding age of 5
or 6.
Tai Shan was the product of artificial insemination. Zoo officials hope
to breed the adult pandas again in the next year.

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