Xin Xin, a native of Mexico and
the granddaughter of pandas gifted by China, is very old. China loans giant
pandas, but the cost may be too steep for the Mexican government.
Xin Xin, the last panda in Latin America, is not your
average bear. A native of Mexico, she’s the only remaining member of a diaspora
descended from giant pandas China gifted to foreign countries during the 1970s
and 1980s.
Mexico’s Chapultepec Zoo is one of only two zoos that
houses pandas without the direct supervision of the Chinese government. That
era may soon end after more than 50 years because Xin Xin, the granddaughter of
pandas gifted by China, is childless, in menopause and, at 32, very old.
It could be the end for pandas in Latin America
altogether if Mexico’s government balks at the price of a new panda.
Xin Xin is a second-generation Mexican-born panda,
tracing her lineage to Pe Pe and Ying Ying, who arrived to the zoo in 1975.
They were part of China’s early “panda diplomacy,” a period when the charismatic
animals were gifted to countries around the world. In 1984, China ended panda
gifts, switching to a policy of high-priced loans.
This history has made Mexico one of a few countries
able to keep locally born panda cubs. Since 1985, the loan program has required
that zoos return any cubs to China.
After Shuan Shuan’s death, Mexican officials began
speaking with China’s ambassador. China now loans giant pandas for between 10
and 15 years at a cost of $1 million annually, meant to support panda conservation
in China.
The austere administration of Mexico President Andrés
Manuel López Obrador appears unlikely to agree to this price. “Another
arrangement will definitely have to be found, but it will depend a lot on the
will and necessities of both countries,” said Fernando Gual, director of Mexico
City Zoos and Wildlife Conservation.
Xin Xin’s own interests are more down to earth. She
passes the time relaxing in a hammock and padding tranquilly around her
enclosure looking for bamboo. Sometimes, her trainer also hides her favorite
treat, red apples.
Watching Xin Xin, Gual smiled as
he remembered the July 1, 1990 morning when her mother Tohui surprised everyone
at the zoo by giving birth to a four-ounce Xin Xin, far from the camera that
recorded her movements 24 hours a day.
“It’s impossible not to have an attachment to
these animals,” Gual said. “We saw most of them being born here.” Tohui was the
second panda ever born outside China, and the first to survive infancy, living
to age 12. Pop star Yuri released a song expressing the city’s pride and
excitement.
The life expectancy of a giant panda
in the wild is about 15 years, but in captivity they have lived to be as old as
38. Decades of conservation efforts in the wild and study in captivity saved
the giant panda from extinction, increasing its population from fewer than
1,000 at one time to more than 1,800 today in the wild and captivity.
Mexico’s remarkable success makes
it one of only two zoos to run a panda program outside the control of the
Chinese government, according to the Congressional Research Service. The other
is in Taiwan, which received two pandas in 2008 in exchange of a pair of
endangered sika deer.
Eight pandas have been born at in
Mexico, of whom five survived to adulthood. Decades of study at the Chapultepec
Zoo have yielded extensive knowledge, as well as genetic material —
cryogenically preserved semen and ovarian tissue — that scientists here hope
will allow them to continue assisting in the pandas’ conservation even after
Xin Xin is gone.
Carlos Cerda Dueñas, a researcher at the Monterrey
Institute of Technology who has studied panda diplomacy, said that Mexico’s
strategic importance could encourage China to make a deal, but that López
Obrador’s preference for austerity could make reaching an agreement “very
difficult.”
No comments:
Post a Comment