Off the wire
CBA Roundup: Defending champion Xinjiang rally to beat Shenzhen 102-94  • Greece grants asylum to Turkish soldier who fled after coup attempt  • Xinhua world news summary at 1530 GMT, Dec. 30  • China recalls record number of cars in 2017  • Iran slams U.S. "interference" in internal affairs  • China sees lower rates of arrest, prosecution of minors  • 2nd LD-Writethru: Over 20 Yemeni civilians killed in Saudi-led airstrikes on Hodeidah  • Malta private jet incident not caused by negligence: report  • 27 firms debut on China's "new third board"  • Xinjiang tame Shenzhen 102-94 in CBA  
You are here:  

Panda in good health after five years in wild

Xinhua,December 31, 2017 Adjust font size:

CHENGDU, Dec. 30 (Xinhua) -- A captive-bred male panda is still in good health after five years in the wild, said the China Conservation and Research Center for Giant Panda.

Taotao was two years old when he was released into the wild on Oct. 11, 2012. On Thursday, he wandered into Liziping natural reserve in southwest China's Sichuan Province and was taken in by researchers.

Taotao weighs 115 kilograms and is in good health, the center said. He was set free again Friday.

The center said Taotao set a new record in terms of the amount of time an artificially-bred panda had survived in the wild.

Taotao was the second effort to release a panda to the wild. The first, Xiangxiang, died after fighting with wild pandas for food, about a year after his release in 2007.

The failure compelled scientists and experts to use a training method that focused the panda cub on learning from its mother.

"Taotao lived in semi-wild conditions from a very young age, and learnt from his mother, so there was no human intervention," said Zhang Hemin, deputy director of the center.

Since 2010, the center has released eight pandas using the method, with seven surviving.

The center will continue to monitor the health condition of the panda. Enditem