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| Male giant panda Ping Ping and female panda Qing Qing mate in a wildlife center in Shaanxi Province in this April 2004 file photo. [newsphoto] | BEIJING, Sept. 26 (Xinhuanet) -- Chinese and American
scientists are using the global positioning system (GPS) to monitor the sex
behavior of giant pandas in deep mountains.
The Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS) Institute of Zoology and the US Zoological Society of San Diego are joining
hands in a three-year giant panda observation program in the Foping Natural
Reserve of northwest China's Shaanxi Province, which costs 660,000US dollars.
Wei Fuwen, a senior researcher at the CAS institute,
on Monday said, "Giant pandas are unaccessible for long periods of time and
traditional observation cannot unravel the ecological mystery of the animals."
Hypogenesis and incretionary disorder make female
giant pandas hard to get pregnant. Scientific statistics indicate that 78
percent of female giant pandas are unable to get pregnant while 90percent of
males are sterile.
"Tracking them with advanced technologies and
observing their sex activities might help us find ways to avoid their
extinction,"Wei acknowledged.
"GPS and other computerized geographical systems
could help scientists track movement of the surveyed in different seasons andthe
animals' behavioral change in different environments."
There are only about 1,000 giant pandas at large
throughout theworld, all spread throughout southwest and northwest China.
Foping Natural Reserve is one of the key observation
bases for wild animals and plants. Since 2003, scientists observed several
instances of mating and birth among giant pandas. Enditem |