no
Pandas, particularly in reference to Giant Pandas, are true bears.
Two of them are leopards and bears.
The Giant Panda is a bear, native to central-western and south western China.
Scientists finally tested the genes from a panda to determine pandas are actually a species of bear. They are the rarest of bears, and found around the wilderness of China, which is currently disappearing due to human encroachment. Giant Pandas in the Bear Clade, and Lesser Pandas(Red Pandas)are in the Raccoon Clade. Bears, Raccoons, and Dogs have a common ancestor.
Red pandas and giant pandas are not alike. They are two different species of animal. Red pandas are related to raccoons whereas giant pandas are bears.
Red pandas have been on Earth for at least 5 million years. They are not really considered to be bears, like their cousins, the giant panda.
Giant pandas, which are true bears, belong to the bear family (Ursidae) and the suborder Caniformia. Red pandas are more closely related to raccoons, weasels, and skunks, sharing the same superfamily (Musteloidea) with them and not with giant pandas. However, the Musteloidea superfamily falls under the suborder Caniformia, so both giant and red pandas belong to the same suborder.
Red panda's enemies are other red pandas, big cats, moon bears, and humans.
Pandas live in the bamboo forests of China. Pandas are not, however, purple. There are Giant Pandas, which are black and white, and Red Pandas, which are... well, kind of reddish-brown, actually.
first pandas a herbivores and polar bears are omnivores there are two types of pandas a red panda and giant panda polar bear and panda both eat plants pandas are black and whit while polar bears are jst white
Bibby Whittaker has written: 'A closer look at bears and pandas' -- subject- s -: Bears, Juvenile literature, Pandas 'Bears and pandas' -- subject- s -: Bears, Juvenile literature, Pandas
I only know that pandas, polar bears, red pandas, are endangered. There are A LOT of animals that are endangered. You should google the "red list." It tells you which animals are and are not endangered.