RCHS

RCHS

Tuesday, May 9, 2017

Giant Panda no longer endangered

An international group has taken the panda off the endangered list thanks to conservation efforts. The panda is classified as “vulnerable” instead of “endangered”, reflecting its rising numbers in southern china. It’s said the population jumped from 1,596 in 2004 to 1,864 in 2014. 

However, although better forest protection has helped increase panda numbers, climate change is predicted to eliminate more than 35 percent of its natural bamboo habitat in the next 80 years, potentially leading to another decline.

Still, animal groups hailed the recovery of the Giant Panda that has been a symbol of china and the global conservation movement. The panda population decreased in the 1980's due to poaching and deforestation until china threw its full weight into preserving the animal.

The chines government has worked to save wild pandas. Giant panda populations in the wild have risen by 17 percent in the decade up to 2014. China now has 67 panda reserves, which are similar to U.S. national parks.

For over fifty years, the giant panda has been the globes most beloved conservation icon as well as the symbol of WWF. Knowing that the panda is now a step further from extinction is an exciting movement for everyone committed to conserving the world’s wildlife and their habitats.

Decades of conservation efforts have included the banning of giant panda poaching their hides were considered a commodity as well as the creation of the panda reserve system. The status update is good news for the animals, but it doesn’t mean that pandas are safe. In the next 80 years, climate change could destroy more than 35 percent of bamboo forests, where pandas live on a bamboo-only diet. That would definitely have consequences for their conservation.

The pandas have been on the endangered list since 1990. But china has been aware of their decline since the 1960s.

(Sourced from associated press)

Blog submission by Kenny McClellan



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