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One of the world's most endangered and iconic animals has just given birth to a new member of their species-and it may be all thanks to COVID-19.
In late march when many zoos across the world had closed to avert a pandemic, two giant pandas in a South Korea zoo suddenly had some time alone, without gazing eyes, and the 7-year-old female named Ai Bao was soon pregnant.
On Monday, the 8-year-old male panda Le Bao became a new father to a healthy cub in Everland Park.
The cub weighed in at 7 ounces, and the zoo reported both mother and baby appear to be healthy and comfortable. It will take between 5-6 months for the panda cub to learn to climb and eat bamboo. After that, it will be available to be viewed by the public.
Meanwhile, in a Hong Kong zoo, another panda couple took advantage of the lockdown to mate-after social distancing from each other for a decade-but Ling-Ling has not shown any signs of pregnancy, a spokeswoman said.
Only 500-1000 giant pandas remain in the wilds of south-central China. The animal exhibits extraordinarily complicated mating behaviors, which has necessitated tireless work on behalf conservationists trying to do their part to save the species.
In the wild, pandas live solitary lives, and, like humans, can be very choosy when it comes to mating. Furthermore, females usually give birth to only one cub at a time, and there is only one period during the year - lasting only a few days, when females can conceive.
Similar to other large intelligent mammals, young pandas need a long time before they are capable of taking care of themselves, a period during which the female will not mate.
With dwindling panda numbers, it was in the 1950s that China began loaning pairs of pandas to foreign zoos as a token of goodwill, in what became known as "Panda Diplomacy"-and South Korea is just the latest zoo to have produced a cub.
Ai Bao and Le Bao arrived in the country in 2016, and their cub is now the first panda born in that nation, though it will be returned to China in 3-4 years time.
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