Giant pandas only have one cub at a time, so they always take care of the cub as best they can (excepting the rare circumstance where they abandon their young, which can happen in many species of animal).
giant pandas eat all day
Yes giant pandas live in a tree and in caves
Giant pandas are not for sale. China will lease them to some zoos, however. Individual persons need not apply. All giant pandas remain the property of the Chinese government.
For the panda, very serious. Most probably, within a few decades all their habitat will have vanished and there will be no wild giant pandas left.
Yes, there are giant pandas in zoos. China loans its Pandas for 4 years and then they are returned.
Yes, all Pandas have backbones. All mammals are vertebrates: have a backbone. Pandas are definitely mammals (have fur/hair, birth live young, are warm-blooded.) QED Pandas have back bones.
The Giant Panda is found in China in their forests, eating bamboo all day long. :)
Actually, no. There are two types of pandas, the red panda and the giant panda. They are related.
about 3
The San Diego Zoo, in California has had the Giant Pandas since 1987. There are now five Giant Pandas with a young Panda that was birthed on site, just being introduced to visitors. There are also Giant Pandas at the National Zoo in Washington DC, the Atlanta Zoo, in Georgia, and the Memphis Zoo in Tennessee. All these zoos have contracts with the Chinese government, and pay a yearly fee to keep the Giant Pandas at their zoo. For more details, please see the sites listed below.
they have the most littleist babies of all bears.
No, giant pandas are not marsupials. Marsupials are mammals with pouches to carry their young in, and pandas do not have a pouch where the babies live for the first part of their lives. Giant Pandas are related to bears; Red Pandas to raccoons. Not all marsupials have pouches.