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Young giant pandas being trained for release into wild
CGTN
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Young giant pandas being trained for release into wild

Three young giant pandas are being trained for life in the wild by the China Conservation and Research Center for Giant Pandas in southwest China's Sichuan Province.

According to latest data from the China Conservation and Research Center for Giant Pandas, the population of giant pandas at the center has exceeded 310, making it the largest captive giant panda population in the world. The center is currently preparing for the next batch of pandas to be returned to the wild.

"We are training three young giant pandas to prepare them for the next step of wild release plan, one male, two females. All of them are currently in good health," said Wu Daifu, director of the center's semi-wild training base.

Male giant panda Xiang Xiang was released into the wild after training in 2006, but he couldn't survive life with wild pandas and eventually died.

Learning from the tragedy, the center has adopted a new way of training, where panda cubs live with their mom in half-wild environments. In addition, researchers have placed captive female giant pandas in the wild, so that they mate with wild male pandas, and bring new bloodline to the captive giant panda population.

"There is basically no precedent for doing this project. The purpose of doing this wild panda introduction project is to improve the genetic diversity and population viability of captive giant pandas," Wu said.

As the world's largest research institute for giant panda conservation, the China Conservation and Research Center for Giant Panda also provides strong technical support for the construction of the Giant Panda National Park. The National Park takes up an area of over 27,400 square kilometers, covering three provinces, 67 giant panda nature reserves in China.

CGTNShen Yi

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