yea
Pandas need to eat, sleep, use the restroom and care for the baby in the female's case.
Three pandas in captivity typically require a minimum space of around 1 to 2 acres to thrive, allowing for adequate room to roam, climb, and exhibit natural behavior. Enrichment features such as trees, structures for climbing, and water sources are essential for their well-being. Additionally, proper habitat design should consider their social dynamics, as pandas are generally solitary but can benefit from proximity in a controlled environment. The specific space requirements can vary based on the facility's design and the individual pandas' needs.
Pandas need to eat up to 20 or 30 pounds of bamboo shoots in one day, to gain the nourishment the they needs to survive.
A fox in captivity needs a lot of protein to eat. Feed them mice, rats, and other proteins. They also need fruits and vegetables.
Pandas need them to chew bamboo.
Pandas typically require a habitat of at least 1,000 acres to thrive in the wild, as they need large areas to find enough bamboo, their primary food source. They are solitary animals and establish their own territories, which can vary in size depending on the availability of resources. In captivity, providing a spacious environment with enrichment is essential for their well-being.
1: Like Any other living thing, pandas need food. 2:to live
It's because pandas need bamboo to live so they need to be around bamboo
The medical needs of children range from medical to dental obligations. Children need to be current on all vacations, need vitamins, any kind of medicines that range for colds to allergies, they also need routine dental cleanings and upkeep as well as age appropriate dental care products at home.
well actual they need 2 things. Bamboo and water.
There are no pandas in Trinidad and Tobago because of the climate there which is tropical marine.The pandas need a cool environment to live in.
They might be, if the pandas bred in zoos were released into the wild. Otherwise, they panda is captive - and while we cannot assess what a panda 'thinks', (never mind what it might think about) we can surmise that as we would not be living our lives to the fullest if we were in captivity, so captive pandas are somehow not achieving the best life possible for them. Some valuable information was gained from studying pandas in zoos in the past, but I doubt that they still need to be 'kept' to be of use to science. Far better to study them in their natural habitat, and to protect that habitat on their behalf.