Red Panda - Colchester Zoo, Colchester, Essex, England - September
2008.
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The Red Panda, Firefox, Fire Cat, or Lesser Panda , "or Ailurus fulgens ("shining cat"), is a mostly herbivorous mammal, specialized as a bamboo feeder. It is slightly larger than a domestic cat (40 - 60 cm long, 3 - 6 kg weight). The Red Panda is endemic to the Himalayas in Bhutan, southern China, India, Laos, Nepal, and Burma. Red Panda is the state animal in the Indian state of Sikkim. It is also the mascot of the Darjeeling international festivals. There is an estimated population of fewer than 2,500 mature individuals. Their population continues to decline due to habitat fragmentation.
Distribution ~ Pandas are native to southeastern Asia, along a
crescent formed by the Himalaya Mountain foothills from western Nepal,
southern Tibet, Bhutan, and Northeast India, then east into the
highlands of Burma (or Myanmar), the Gongshan Mountains of Yunnan
province in China, and the Hengduan Mountains of Sichuan province in
China. The latter area is thought to have been a refuge for Red
Pandas, as well as many other animals, during the last (Pleistocene)
period of glaciation. The gorge of the Brahmaputra River, as it loops
around the eastern end of the Himalayas, is considered a natural
division between the two subspecies, although some suggest the A. f.
fulgens range extends more eastwardly into Yunnan China. Red pandas
used to have a broader distribution farther northeast into China and
farther southwest into India.
Red Pandas inhabit climates of moderate temperature (10-25 °C) with
little annual fluctuation and prefer forested mountainous areas at
elevations of 1,800-4,800 m,or 5000-15,700 ft, particularly temperate
deciduous-coniferous forests with an understory of rhododendron and,
of course, bamboo. They share habitat with another bamboo specialist,
the Giant Panda, in China (Wolong Preserve). Red Pandas are cavity
nesters, using rock dens and old hollow trees. They often spend the
day drooped over a branch high in the trees, feeding more actively at
dawn and dusk.
Physical characteristics ~ The Red Panda is quite long: 79-120 cm, or
31 to 47 in (including the tail length of 30 to 60 cm/12 to 24 in).
Males weigh 4.5 to 6.2 kg (10 to 14 lb); females 3 to 4.5 kg (6 to 10
lb). The Red Panda is specialized as a bamboo feeder, with long and
soft reddish-brown fur on upper parts, blackish fur on lower parts,
light face with tear markings and robust cranial-dental features. The
light face has white badges similar to those of a raccoon, but each
individual can have distinctive markings. Its roundish head has
medium-sized upright ears, a black nose, and very dark eyes: almost
pitch black. Its long bushy tail with six alternating yellowish red
transverse ocher rings provides balance and excellent camouflage
against its habitat of moss- and lichen-covered trees. The legs are
black, short and bear-like with thick fur on the soles of the paws
hiding scent glands and serving as thermal insulation on snow-covered
or ice surfaces. The Red Panda is specialized as a bamboo feeder with
strong, curved and sharp semi-retractile claws standing inward for
firm grasping to facilitate substantial movement on narrow tree
branches and seizing leaves and fruit. Like the Giant Pandas
(Ailuropoda melanoleuca), it has a “false thumb” that really is an
extension of the wrist bone.
Behavior ~ Red Pandas are crepuscular (most active at dawn and dusk)
and live in the slopes of the south of the Himalayas and the
mountainous forests of the southwest of China, at altitudes of up to
4,800 meters, and generally do not venture below 1,800 meters. They
are sedentary during the day resting in the branches of trees and in
tree hollows and increase their activity only in the late afternoon
and/or early evening hours. They are very heat sensitive with an
optimal “well-being” temperature between 17 and 25°C, and cannot
tolerate temperatures over 25 °C at all. As a result, Red Pandas sleep
during the hot noontime in the shady crowns of treetops, often lying
stretched out on forked branches or rolled up in tree caves with their
tail covering their face.
Red Pandas are very skillful and acrobatic animals that live
predominantly in trees. They live in territories, frequently alone,
and only rarely live in pairs or in groups of families. They are very
quiet except for some twittering and whistling communication sounds.
They search for food at night, running along the ground or through the
trees with speed and agility and, after finding food, use their front
paws to place the food into their mouths. Red pandas drink by plunging
their paw into the water and licking their paws. Predators of Red
Pandas are snow leopards (Uncia uncia), martens (Mustelidae) and
humans. The species has also faced a great deal of human-induced
habitat destruction.
Red Pandas begin their daily activity with a ritual washing of their
fur by licking their front paws and massaging their back, stomach and
sides. They also scrub their back and belly along the sides of trees
or a rock. They then patrol their territory, marking it with a weak
musk-smelling secretion from their anal gland and with their urine.
If a Red Panda feels threatened or senses danger, it will often try to
scamper up into an inaccessible rock column or a tree. If they can no
longer flee, they stand up on their hind legs, which makes them appear
somewhat more daunting and allows them the possibility of using the
razor-sharp claws on their front paws, which can inflict substantial
wounds. Red Pandas are friendly, but are not helpless, and will resist
if they feel threatened.
Diet ~ Red Panda eats mostly bamboo. Like the Giant Panda, it cannot
digest cellulose, so it must consume a large volume of bamboo to
survive. Its diet consists of about two-thirds bamboo, but they also
eat berries, fruit, mushrooms, roots, acorns, lichen, grasses, and
they are known to supplement their diet with young birds, fish, eggs,
small rodents, and insects on occasion. In captivity, however, they
will readily eat meat. Red Pandas are excellent climbers and forage
largely in trees. The Red Panda does little more than eat and sleep
due to its low-calorie diet. Bamboo shoots are more easily digested
than leaves and exhibited the highest digestibility in the summer and
autumn, intermediate in the spring, and low in the winter. These
variations correlate with the nutrient contents in the bamboo. The Red
Panda poorly processes bamboo, especially the cellulose and cell wall
components. This implies that microbial digestion plays only a minor
role in its digestive strategy. The transit of bamboo through the red
panda gut is very rapid (~2–4 hours). In order to survive on this
poor-quality diet, the Red Panda has to select high-quality sections
of the bamboo plant such as the tender leaves and shoots in large
quantities (over 1.5 kg {3 lbs} of fresh leaves and 4 kg {9 lbs} of
fresh shoots daily) that pass through the digestive tract fairly
rapidly so as to maximize nutrient intake (Wei et al., 1999).
Peem (pattpoom), Werner Schnell (1.stream), Love.to.be.fuzzy[in pelo stat virtus], Steve-h, and 294 other people added this photo to their favorites.
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Stephanie / seenonflickr 43 months ago | reply
Hi, I'm an admin for a group called look what I saw on Flickr!, and we'd love to have this added to the group!
姜文强 43 months ago | reply
lovely
tenphunpal 43 months ago | reply
Tibetan recoon
bamarina012 42 months ago | reply
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Grim Jellynton 42 months ago | reply
Brilliant textures and vibrant colours
Ishan Aranjikal 41 months ago | reply
Hi, I'm an admin for a group called CONTINENT: ASIA! ! ! post 1, award 2 (sweeper active), and we'd love to have this added to the group!
This is an invitation to post your outstanding photo to the Group Pool:

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"Sharing to the Whole World!"
Ron Ray 41 months ago | reply
I got your "browser", right HERE!
This is not a photo, is a sandwich 38 months ago | reply
So cutie picture
It's lovely
54StorminWillyGJ54 38 months ago | reply
this is so adorable!
shimmertje 37 months ago | reply
It's probably nocturnal. Great shot! I spent the day in Colchester once but didn't make it to the zoo.
Milusa 37 months ago | reply
Hi, I'm an admin for a group called SOLO ANIMALES // ONLY ANIMALS (POST 1,COMMENT 1), and we'd love to have this added to the group!
Big Rock Cat [deleted] 36 months ago | reply
Please add this image to Big Rock Cat's Love, Life, Art

Ashly S. 35 months ago | reply
omg!!!!!! so cute <333 beautiful shot!
paperbackwriter. 35 months ago | reply
that's the cutest thing!
itsallgroovy1 33 months ago | reply
so sweet!
West Sichuan 31 months ago | reply
very cute!!!!
monkeyflowers 29 months ago | reply
Awww, what a sweet baby.
Karen Soles 22 months ago | reply
Great pic for educational use!
Michael(DH4OAA) 10 months ago | reply
Gesehen in:
die schönsten Tierporträts / Tiergesichter
maerzbecher-Deutschland zu Fuß 10 months ago | reply
Hallo.
Ich habe Dein wunderschönes Foto in unserem
Pool
NATUR / nature E X K L U S I V entdeckt.
I have seen your excellent foto in our pool
NATUR / nature E X K L U S I V