It’s a Girl (Panda)!
Friday, September 6th, 2013September 6, 2013
The National Zoological Park, maintained by the Smithsonian Institution in Washington, D.C., announced this week that its new giant panda cub, born on August 23, is a girl. It is difficult to determine the sex of a newborn panda. The infants are very fragile, weighing on average 0.33 pound (150 grams) at birth.

Giant pandas commonly weigh from 200 to 300 pounds (90 to 140 kilograms). Their young are born weighing less than a pound in a very fragile and premature state. Panda infants do not even mover for their first two months. (c Tom & Pat Leeson, Photo Researchers)
The cub’s gender and her sire were both determined by DNA testing. Her father is Tian Tian (pronounced t-YEN t-YEN, which in Chinese means more and more). Her mother is Mei Xiang (may-SHONG, which means beautiful fragrance). Mei Xiang had been artificially inseminated with sperm from Tian Tian and another panda. Following Chinese tradition, the zoo will wait to name the new panda until she is 100 days old.
In addition to the National Zoo, three zoos in the United States have giant pandas: the Memphis Zoo, Zoo Atlanta, and the San Diego Zoo. Pandas are special at the National Zoo, however. China gave a pair of pandas to the zoo in 1972 after President Richard Nixon’s historic visit to the country in February of that year.
The pandas at the National Zoo are owned by China. After five or six years, the new girl panda will be sent to China to live in a special panda reserve.
Additional World Book articles:
- What’s New at the Zoo? (a special report)
- Zoo (1972) (a Back in Time article)
Other resources: