Visitors look at Huan Huan, one of the two giant pandas which arrived in France last winter from China, on Aug 23, at Beauval zoo in Saint-Aignan, central France. Alain Jocard / Agence France-Presse |
Like many normal young couples starting a life together, Huan Huan and Yuan Zi have moved into anew home, happily go about their daily business, and hopes are high for a baby.
But nothing else is normal about them. Their residence costs more than $1 million a year, 10,000humans come to gawk at them every day, and bitter failure has met most of the chosen few who tookthe rocky road to parenthood before them.
Not that any of that bothers Yuan Zi ("Chubby" in Chinese) or his female partner Huan Huan ("Happy"),or the hordes of tourists who are thrilled by the indolent exploits of the giant pandas in Beauval zoo inthe French countryside.
Yuan Zi, as if to show his indifference, took a break from munching bamboo in morning sunshine toturn his rear end toward a crowd of excited onlookers and, to cries of delight, produced a large,shining, green deposit.
"They eat 35 kg of bamboo a day and defecate about 30 kg a day," said zoo director Rodolphe Delord,as he hosted yet another media crew reporting on the "pandamania" that erupted since they arrived inJanuary.
Visitors to Beauval, whose tree-lined alleys and collection of 4,500 animals helped make it onto ForbesTraveler magazine's list of the world's 15 most beautiful zoos, last year welcomed 600,000 visitors,double the number from three years earlier.
Attendance figures shot up by a further 50 percent in recent months, largely due to the cuddly blackand white bears who are the star attraction in a new two-hectare Chinese section complete withpagodas and marble lion statues.
There they are monitored round the clock by security guards and surveillance cameras, and during theday crowds swarm to see them snooze or eat the frozen apple, honey and ice treat they have beengetting during a recent heatwave.
A zookeeper comes to their enclosure every hour during the day and gives a presentation that explainsthat the panda is an endangered species with only about 1,600 remaining in the wild in China andsome 300 others in captivity worldwide - mostly in China, but also in just 15 foreign zoos.
Huan Huan and Yuan Zi, who have just reached maturity at the age of four, came from China's pandaconservation center in Sichuan province and are in Beauval on a 10-year loan - for which the privatezoo is paying China around $ 1 million annually.
The pair are in France as another example of "panda diplomacy" - China's bid to use soft power toboost its image and strengthen diplomatic ties with a country by loaning the popular bears.
There is immense pressure on Beauval to get the pair back to China in good shape. "We're a littlestressed because we're accountable to them," said zookeeper Astrid Bernasconi.
Crush on cubs
There is also great pressure to make sure that the couple produces offspring. The section of the zoowhere they are kept has an optimistic sign declaring that it is the "Conservation and Breeding Centerof Giant Pandas."
But captive pandas are notorious for their reluctance to breed.
A stark reminder of that came just last week with the demise in Berlin Zoo of Bao Bao, at 34 the oldestknown male panda in the world. He died cubless despite having procured a series of females sincehis arrival in Europe in 1980.
Other examples of panda reproductive failure abound. A pair gifted to Britain in 1974 remained cublessto the end, while the last pair of pandas that lived in France were an embarrassing disaster in breedingterms.
Chairman Mao Zedong gave the couple to French president Georges Pompidou but it soon emergedthat they were in fact a pair of males, one of whom died after just a few months in France.
Some of the more extreme methods used to get pandas to copulate have included showing themvideos of other bears mating and even supplying the male with Viagra.
Here in Beauval the zookeepers - including a pair from China who will stay throughout the bears' 10-year French sojourn - are taking a more scientific approach.
They take frequent blood samples and carry out other tests to make sure they don't miss the mere 48hours a year during which Huan Huan will be fertile.
The bears live in adjacent but separate enclosures from which they can see but not touch each other,and as soon as it looks like the female is ready, zoo staff will open up the barriers to let them hook. "We mostly keep them apart because if they get too familiar with each other, then they tend to loseinterest," said zoo director Delord, adding that if nature does not take its course then they will tryartificial insemination.
There is no guarantee that a cute little panda cub will result from the Beauval pair's first coupling, aswas illustrated earlier this year when Britain's only pandas failed to mate during their brief window ofopportunity.
It was "close, but no cigar", Edinburgh Zoo said, after Yang Guang ("Sunshine") mounted femalepanda Tian Tian ("Sweetie") several times, without full mating taking place.
Huan Huan and Yuan Zi meanwhile carry on with their daily 14 hours of feeding, blissfully unaware thathere in Beauval they embody the claim in George Orwell's novel Animal Farm that all creatures areequal, but some are more equal than others.
Agence France-Presse
(China Daily 08/29/2012 page10)
In China, most giant pandas live in the mountains of Qinling, Minshan, Qionglai, Daxiangling and Xiaoxiangling.
By the end of 2011, the number of wild giant pandas in the world was about 1,590.