The zoo’s last two giant pandas, 27-year-old panda Bai Yun and her 6- year-old son Xiao Liwu, are scheduled to be repatriated to China later this spring as … Bai Yun was born in 1991 at the Wolong Giant Panda Research Center in China and was among the original cohort of bears loaned to the zoo in … Photo via center. During her 22 years at the Californian zoo, Bai Yun gave birth to six cubs, with Xiao Liwu being her youngest. “They confirmed that there is no serious stress reaction and both pandas were doing well.”After a veterinary expert checked the pandas again, “the enthusiastic staff unloaded the transport cage in an orderly manner, and patiently guided the giant pandas into the isolation quarantine areas.”At 3:30 p.m., a welcome ceremony was held, kicked off by singing and dancing of Dujiangyan children.“They will be under quarantine for a month to help them adapt to the conditions in China,” Zou Wenyong, a spokesman for the Dujiangyan center, said in a Veterinarian Deng Linhua told the paper that the panda enclosure will be thoroughly disinfected every day and caretakers will conduct health checks to make sure they are not carrying any diseases. Bai Yun’s first cub, Hua Mei, the first panda cub to be born in the United States and survive to adulthood, was born in 1999 through artificial insemination with Shi Shi’s sperm. Bai Yun was born in China in 1991 and moved to the San Diego Zoo in 1996 under the conservation loan agreement between the U.S. and China. Her 1st cub Hua Mei was born when she was 8 years old. SAN DIEGO (KABC) -- A 23-year-old giant panda named Bai Yun underwent a dental procedure to fix a chipped tooth Wednesday morning at the San Diego Zoo.

The zoo has launched a three-week farewell celebration for 27-year-old giant panda Bai Yun and her son, 6-year-old Xiao Liwu, before the two are repatriated to China this spring. Bai Yun was born in Wolong Giant Panda Research Center on September 7, 1991. Jan 21, 2014 - Mr. Wu's beautiful Momma. ... the zoo’s live streaming “panda … The zoo's last two giant pandas, 27-year-old panda Bai Yun and her 6- year-old son Xiao Liwu, are scheduled to be repatriated to China later this spring as … Date Location Comment; 1991-9-0: WOLONG: Birth: 1996-9-0: San Diego Zoo: Loan to
Mother and son Bai Yun, 27, and Xiao Liwu, 6, landed at 7:30 a.m. Thursday local time and entered the gate of the Qingjiangshan base of the Dujiangyan center at 1 p.m., the center in southwest Sichuan Province announced Friday.“Veterinarian and animal care staff, who had been waiting at the airport for a long time, conducted preliminary observations on the two giant pandas,” said the center. A son, Mei Sheng, was born in 2003. Since the 1940s, China has gifted or loaned dozens of giant pandas to 14 countries.Three U.S. zoos—the National Zoo in Washington, D.C.; Zoo Atlanta in Atlanta, Georgia; and the Memphis Zoo in Memphis, Tennessee—still house giant pandas.We get it: you like to have control of your own internet experience.Below are steps you can take in order to whitelist Observer.com on your browser:Click the AdBlock button on your browser and select Click the AdBlock Plus button on your browser and select Click the AdBlock Plus button on your browser and select Amid a new round of tariff battles between the U.S. and China on each other’s exports, China has recalled two cute giant pandas from the San Diego Zoo in California, British tabloid The two iconic animals for the zoo, 27-year-old Bai Yun (meaning “white cloud”) and her six-year-old cub Xiao Liwu (“little present”) have been sent back to China after the country scrapped its conservation loan agreement with the U.S.They landed at China’s Conservation and Research Center for Giant Pandas in Sichuan Province on Thursday morning, Bai Yun was born in China in 1991 and moved to the San Diego Zoo in 1996 under the conservation loan agreement between the U.S. and China. Regardless, Bai Yun gave birth to her first panda, Hua Mei, in 1999 by artificial insemination. On April 27, the pandas ended their exhibition in the United States and entered the preparatory stage before returning to China.In the 23 years since the Research Center and the San Diego Zoo have carried out scientific research cooperation, the giant panda project has achieved success in the protection, breeding, behavioral ecology, disease prevention and control, and public education of the giant pandas, the center said.