The Panda Party is back on as giant pandas will
return to Washington’s National Zoo by year’s end
NATIONAL NEWS. Two-year-old male giant panda Bao Li, top photo, and
two-year-old female giant panda Qing Bao, bottom photo, are seen in
their habitats at Shenshuping Base in Wolong, China. The two giant
pandas will move to Washington’s National Zoo from China this year. The
announcement about Bao Li and Qing Bao came about half a year after the
zoo sent its three pandas back to China. (Roshan Patel, Smithsonian’s
National Zoo and Conservation Biology Institute via AP)
From The Asian Reporter, V34, #6 (June 3, 2024), page 8.
The Panda Party is back on as giant pandas will return
to Washington’s National Zoo by year’s end
By Dino Hazell
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — Months after the nation’s capital bid an emotional
farewell to its giant pandas, the National Zoo is expecting a renewed
surge in panda-mania with the announcement that two more of the furry
black-and-white icons will be coming to Washington.
The zoo announced in late May that a fresh agreement had been struck
with the Chinese government, and a pair of adult pandas would be
arriving from China by the end of the year. The Smithsonian’s National
Zoo and Conservation Biology Institute said the incoming pair are Bao Li
(pronounced BOW’-lee) and Qing Bao (ching-BOW’).
"We’re thrilled to announce the next chapter of our breeding and
conservation partnership begins by welcoming two new bears, including a
descendent of our beloved panda family, to Washington, D.C.," said
Brandie Smith, the zoo’s director. "This historic moment is proof
positive our collaboration with Chinese colleagues has made an
irrefutable impact."
Giant pandas are prized in Washington and around the nation and the
world. The number of pandas in American zoos has dwindled as loan
agreements lapsed during diplomatic tensions between the U.S. and China
that remain high. Washington’s three pandas returned to China last
November.
Word of the new exchange agreement spread quickly through the
National Zoo grounds, with multiple signs announcing "The Pandas Are
Coming!" and fresh displays of panda-themed merchandise holding a
prominent place in the gift shops.
Sofia Valle, an 8th grader from Bear, Delaware, came with a school
group hoping to see pandas and unaware that the zoo is currently
panda-free. Instead she and her classmates — all wearing panda-ear
headbands — posed for pictures in front of a Giant Panda statue and
discussed coming back after the new bears arrive.
"They’re my favorite animal," Valle said. "They’re so fluffy! And
they’re lazy like me."
Panda fever also means business for the area around the zoo. At Baked
By Yael, a bakery across the street from one of the main entrances,
panda-themed cake pops and t-shirts never stopped selling, even after
the bears had left.
"We are super-super excited," said owner Yael Krigman. "Honestly, we
never gave up faith. We knew they were going to come back eventually."
When they arrive, the pandas will spend several weeks in quarantine
with limited human contact as zoo staffers work to acclimate them to
their new environment.
"This is huge. I can’t wait. It couldn’t have come any sooner," said
Mariel Lally, one of the zoo’s panda keepers. "Pandas are such an
incredible species."
Chinese President Xi Jinping had signalled during a trip in late 2023
that China would be sending new pandas to the United States. He called
them "envoys of friendship between the Chinese and American peoples."
The zoo accompanied the announcement with a light-hearted video
featuring Smith, Smithsonian Institution secretary Lonnie G. Bunch III,
and first lady Jill Biden. The trio in the video are gathered to discuss
protocol for a reception to welcome unnamed honored guests. When Biden
asks about attire and menu, Smith dryly replies that the impending
guests are "strict vegetarians" who are "partial to black and white."
Last November, giant pandas Tian Tian and Mei Xiang and their cub,
Xiao Qi Ji, went back to China, prompting a nationwide outpouring of
farewell from millions of U.S. panda fans of all ages. The trio’s
departure left only one panda family remaining in American zoos, at Zoo
Atlanta, and those remain scheduled to return to China later this year.
Zoo Atlanta is making preparations to return panda parents Lun Lun
and Yang Yang along with their American-born twins Ya Lun and Xi Lun,
zoo officials said in early May.
It’s possible that America will welcome another new panda pair before
the Atlanta bears depart. The San Diego Zoo in April said that staff
members recently travelled to China to meet pandas Yun Chuan and Xin Bao,
which could arrive in California as soon as this summer. A separate
agreement was also announced to send a breeding pair of pandas to San
Francisco as well.
Pandas have been a symbol of U.S.-China friendship since Beijing sent
a pair to the National Zoo in 1972, ahead of the normalization of
bilateral relations. Later, Beijing loaned pandas to other U.S. zoos,
with proceeds going back to panda conservation programs.
When U.S-China relations began to sour in recent years, members of
the Chinese public started to demand the return of giant pandas.
Unproven allegations that U.S. zoos mistreated the pandas, known as
China’s "national treasure," flooded China’s social media.
The National Zoo said the pandas coming to Washington are:
* Bao Li, a 2-year-old male whose name means "treasure" and
"energetic." He was born on August 4, 2021, at the China Conservation
and Research Center for the Giant Panda in Sichuan to father An An and
mother Bao Bao. The zoo said Bao Li’s mother was born at the zoo in
2013, and his grandparents Tian Tian and Mei Xiang lived at the zoo from
2000 to 2023. It was Mei Xiang and Tian Tian, along with their cub Xiao
Qi Ji, who left the zoo in November.
* Qing Bao, a 2-year-old female whose name means "green" and
"treasure." She was born on September 12, 2021.
A research and breeding agreement with the Chinese runs through April
2034 and, like previous ones, says any cubs born at the zoo will move to
China by age 4, according to the announcement. The zoo will pay a $1
million annual fee to the China Wildlife Conservation Association to
support research and conservation efforts in China.
AP writer Ashraf Khalil contributed to this article.
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