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Baby Panda Bear Picture



Fascinating Baby Panda Bear Picture galleries and information on different Bear species can be found on numerous websites. Panda Bears are called Giant Pandas, and they, like Brown Bears, Polar Bears, Grizzly Bears, etc., belong to the Ursidae family. These Bears live in central China, and, unlike other Bears, their diet almost entirely consists of Bamboo. Giant Pandas are highly endangered, since there are about 1,600 species living in the wild.

Due to their distinctively cute appearance, Giant Pandas are the darlings of many people. Young Pandas are particularly pathetic and funny, and even one look at a Baby Panda Bear Picture can make you desperately want to cross the globe and take a look at a living Giant Panda. What’s most endearing about them is their non-carnivorous feeding habits, although they do belong to the order Carnivora.

Panda Bears have a black-and-white coat, with black ears, muzzle, shoulders, legs and around the eyes. The rest of the body is black. Giant Pandas are not very large, their weight averaging 220-250 pounds. Their body formation is similar to that of other Bears. Although Panda Bears are considered to be less aggressive than other Bear species, a frightened animal or a nursing mother can pose threat to people. Panda Bears have very strong molar teeth because of the necessity to crush strong materials. As we can see, a Baby Panda Bear Picture alone does not convey a full image of the animal.

Pandas are more social than all other Bears. They may form groups and share food during periods other than mating seasons and in cases other than when a mother cares for her young. Probably, this is because Bamboo trees are much more available than prey, which they do not actually take, and hence there is no tough competition between individuals. Since Panda Bears dwell in tropical areas with food available year round, they do not fall into winter sleep and stay awake all the time.

Until recently, Pandas have been mistakenly considered to be poor breeders. In the wild, females breed once every two years. However, it is a well-known fact that Pandas may lose interest in mating in captivity. They are very elusive by nature and extremely sensitive to human activities, and hence they may not be adequate in artificial environments. Their inability to breed in captivity has prompted many zoos to use artificial insemination. Wild Pandas breed in spring, and the gestation period lasts 100-160 days. Litters contain 1-2 cubs, which are born blind, naked and helpless. They start crawling by about 80 days old. Cubs stay around the mother until the age of 1.5-2 years old. Baby Panda Bear Picture sites that are available on the web usually contain photographs from zoos, because finding baby Pandas in the wild can be difficult and dangerous.



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