New Panda Cub at National Zoo
UPDATE:
September 24, 2012
The new panda cub born at the National Zoo died on September 23, just one week after its birth, zoo officials have announced. A preliminary examination found that the cub had high levels of fluid in her abdomen and irregularities in her liver. But zoo officials cautioned that these conditions may not have directly contributed to the death of the cub, which was a female. The new cub was the sixth giant panda cub to die at the zoo since the 1980′s. A seventh cub was stillborn. The only cub born at the National Zoo to survive into maturity has been Tai Shan, who was born in 2005 and was returned to China in 2010.
September 19, 2012
A panda cub was born on September 16 at the National Zoo in Washington, D.C. Mei Xiang, the mother panda, “is cradling her cub closely, and she looks so tired, but every time she tries to lay down, the cub squawks and she sits right up and cradles the cub more closely,” reported the zoo’s chief veterinarian, Suzan Murray, in a statement issued to the media. “She is the poster child for a perfect panda mom.” The National Zoo is part of the Smithsonian Institution. The father is Tian Tian, who also lives at the zoo.
The birth of a panda cub is a cause for celebration as well as worry. A newborn panda is about the size of a stick of butter, weighs between 3 and 5 ounces (85 and 140 grams), and is utterly helpless. It is at risk of infection and is often accidentally crushed by its mother. The zoo’s first pandas–Ling Ling and Hsing Hsing, gifts to the United States from China in 1972–produced five cubs, but none lived more than a few days. A mother panda must make sure that the hairless cub is kept warm and is nursing sufficiently.

The giant panda commonly weighs from 200 to 300 pounds (90 to 140 kilograms). It often eats sitting upright with its hind legs stretched out. (c) Tom & Pat Leeson, Photo Researchers
Zookeepers are staying at a safe distance from Mei Xiang and her cub. They want the mother to raise her cub naturally. It will probably be several weeks before she leaves it alone long enough for veterinarian Murray and her team to give it a checkup. The zoo’s only other living cub, Tai Shan, was born to Mei Xiang and Tian Tian in 2005. Tai Shan left the zoo for China in 2010.
Mei Xiang is a giant panda, a type of mammal that is native to central China. The giant panda eats only a certain type of bamboo shoot, stem, or leaf and is in danger of extinction.
Additional World Book articles:
- Endangered species
- Zoo (1972) (a Back in Time article)
- Conservation (1983) (a Back in Time article)