This lovely giant panda has a real prototype, and its name is Jiji. It is a female panda that Austrian animal dealer Heini Dehmel exchanged with Beijing Zoo for three giraffes, two rhinos, hippopotamus and zebra in 1958, and later lived in London Zoo.
World Wildlife Fund, now renamed World Wildlife Fund. The world's largest international organization engaged in nature and wildlife protection. Established in 196 1 year. Headquartered in Grand, Switzerland. Its purpose is to make people realize the possible serious consequences of destroying natural ecosystems in climate change, soil erosion, drought and floods. At the same time, we call people's attention to the fact that there are 65,438+0,000 species of animals and 25,000 species of plants on the verge of extinction in the world. If they are not protected in time, their losses will be irreparable.
Behavioral characteristics of giant pandas
Giant pandas spend half their eating time every day, and most of the rest time in sleep. In the wild, giant pandas sleep for 2-4 hours between meals. Lying flat, lying on the side, prone, stretching or curling are their favorite sleep styles.
In the zoo, the keepers feed them regularly, twice a day, so the pandas spend the rest of their time resting. Giant pandas look cute even when they sleep. They are very flexible and can put their heavy bodies in various positions. My favorite posture is to support my legs on a tree and cover my eyes with my hands.
The cutest characteristics of giant pandas are chubby body and slow walking style. This is because they live in an environment with sufficient food and no natural enemies, and do not need to act quickly. However, it is its slow movement that enables it to conserve energy to adapt to low-energy foods. They sometimes climb trees to spy on the situation, avoid intruders or take a nap.