Giant panda habitat opens at California zoo to much fanfare
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[August 09, 2024]
By Jorge Garcia
SAN DIEGO (Reuters) - Two Chinese giant pandas are now California
residents as their enclosure at the San Diego Zoo opened to the public
on Thursday in an international ceremony.
The pandas, Yun Chuan and Xin Bao, are the first to enter the United
States in 21 years and were welcomed by California Governor Gavin Newsom
and the Chinese ambassador to the United States Xie Feng.
Yun Chuan, a 5-year-old male is easily recognized by his long, slightly
pointed nose, while Xin Bao is a 4-year-old female with big fluffy ears
whose name means a "precious treasure of prosperity and abundance."
Yun Chuan's name means "big river of cloud." His mother, Zhen Zhen, was
born at the San Diego Zoo in 2007.
The zoo is working closely with Chinese experts to help with the
adaptation period and understanding of the needs of the two pandas. The
pair are enjoying a variety of fresh bamboo and a local adaptation of "wotou",
a traditional Chinese steamed corn bread that's also called "panda
bread".
"The arrival of Yun Chuan and Xin Bao, as we celebrate the 45th
anniversary of our diplomatic ties, has sent a clear and important
message," said Ambassador Xie Feng.
"China-US cooperation on panda conservation will not cease. Our people
to people exchanges and sub-national cooperation will not stop and once
opened, the door of China-U.S. friendship will not be shut again."
Newsom said the new pandas were about "celebrating our common humanity.
It's about celebrating the things that bind us together."
"And so, for me, this spirit of pride that is associated with this
opening today with the experience that so many will have, that we just
had at Panda Ridge, is about a deeper meaning," Newsom added.
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Panda bear Yun Chuan rests in the Panda Ridge enclosure at San Diego
Zoo in San Diego, California, U.S., August 7, 2024. REUTERS/Mario
Anzuoni
Visitors of all ages to Panda Ridge on Thursday were exuberant about
the pandas' cuteness.
"I have never seen a panda before, I've only seen them on TV and
nature documentaries," said Kobi Davis from Michigan. "They are
super cute. They just kind of laze around, you know, there's charm
in that."
Keena Butcher from Canada called them "quiet, thoughtful creatures
and just realize we can have hope for our future if we can conserve
them."
China's Communist government has long used "panda diplomacy" to
enhance the country's soft power, lending the large but
cuddly-looking black-and-white bears to zoos in various countries
over the decades as goodwill animal ambassadors.
In late 2023, Washington's National Zoo said goodbye to its beloved
giant pandas, which were returned to China amid heightened tensions
between the two global superpowers.
In May this year, the National Zoo said China would send two young
pandas to Washington by the end of the year.
(Reporting by Jorge Garcia in San Diego; Editing by Mary Milliken
and Sandra Maler)
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