Source: Xinhua |
2008-6-23 |
NEWSPAPER EDITION
SOME 67 giant pandas living in the Chengdu Giant Panda Breeding Research Base are now on a diet after the May 12 quake damaged bamboo forests.
The deadly earthquake has damaged the bamboo forests in Dujiangyan, Mianyang, Jiangyou, Pingwu and Ya'an, causing a food shortage for the pandas, according to Wang Chengdong, an official with the base.
The base had to ration bamboo for the bears, who should have eaten more bamboo shoots during the breeding season, a breeder told the Chengdu-based Tianfu Morning Post.
An adult giant panda usually produces 10 kilograms of faeces per day, but now they are producing only 2-3 kg because of scarce food, said Wang.
Besides bamboo, breeders are feeding the pandas with supplements and fruit. The bamboo shortage will not last for long, however, said Hu Jinchu, a panda expert from China's Animal Institute.
As a bamboo-rich province, there were still bamboo forests undamaged in other parts of Sichuan, and new bamboo would grow up soon on the quake-ravaged land, said Hu.
China's major giant panda habitat, home to about 1,400 of the wild bears, suffered great damage in the quake.
According to the State Forestry Administration, the tremor affected 28.5 million mu (about 1.9 million hectares), or 83 percent of the country's total area of the panda habitat, with 8.3 percent being completely destroyed. One panda died in the quake in Wolong nature reserve.
A SENIOR provincial food official has been suspended from duties and is being investigated by the judiciary over allegedly allowing the provision of under-weighted bags of food for victims of the May 12 earthquake. ...
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