Nope! Pandas are the only bears that do not. They have thick fur and a teensy bit of fat and their main food source, bamboo, grows all year round. These adaptions allow them to survive the harsh mountain winters.
In their dens
Yes they do by instinct and nature
There are many hibernatory land animals, notably in the suborders Caniformia and Sciuropmorpha.
The simple answer is - they don't ! Their natural habitat is the Australian desert area which never gets cold enough to entice them to hibernate.
The possessive form of the plural noun pandas is pandas'.Example: Development by people is encroaching on the pandas' habitat.
They should never hibernate they are to small to live of body and will most likely die if the conditions are to cold they will go in to hibernation which they should NEVER do
red pandas and giant pandas
Technically, yes red pandas are pandas. In fact they were the very first pandas. The other pandas were named after it.
There are Giant Pandas and Red Pandas.
No.Male pandas are bigger than female pandas.
pandas come from larger pandas, who later grow to be big and have little pandas
pandas are shy animal and it behaiver other pandas sucessful behaiver.