some Chinese are being mean and killing the red pandas so that they could have fur coats and the tail because it is very valuable
[people hunt it] i believe so ....... i definatley kno the red panda is .... but I'm pretty sure most species of panda are endangered
what can we do to stop the endangered the red panda
The red panda is now considered to be endangered.
The Red Panda was first listed by the IUCN Red List as "vulnerable" in 1994. It was then changed to a status of "endangered " in 1996. It was first studied by the IUCN Red List in 1988, but it wasn't listed due to insufficient data, until the 1994 listing. For more details see site listed below.
Yes, the red panda are endangered today. Sadly it has mostly been because of humans.
The red panda first become endangered in 1996. As of June 2014, there are only 2,500 or so left in the wild and they have become extinct in several of the Chinese provinces.
2006
The lesser panda or red panda is rare and considered to be an endangered species.
The giant panda, although both species are endangered.
The Asian Elephant was first listed as "endangered" with the it's population decreasing in 1986 by the IUCN Red List. It is currently listed as 'endangered" by the IUCN Red List and the population is still listed as decreasing. For more details, see sites listed
Only the red panda is considered endangered. The giant panda is now listed as vulnerable.
The red panda was first listed as vulnerable in 1994 and listed as endangered in 1996. The scientific name for the red panda is Ailurus fulgens.The Red Panda, Lesser Panda, or the "Firefox" was originally listed by the IUCN Red List in 1988. The first status that this species was listed under was "Insufficiently Known", which isn't used as a title for a status now. Then in 1994 the status was changed to "Vulnerable". There was another change to the Red Panda's status in 1996, when it was listed as "Endangered". The most recent change has taken place in 2008 changing the Red Panda back to the status of "vulnerable". The species has been through much instability due to habitat loss, and is considered very difficult to survey due to it's mountainous regions and it's own shy nature. It doesn't meet the updated requirements for the "endangered" status. For more details, please see sites listed below.