Bao Bao
宝宝
Bao Bao (宝宝, studbook #241) was a male giant panda born in the wild of Sichuan around 1978. Captured as a juvenile and t...
View profileGiant pandas with studbook numbers from 200 to 299
宝宝
Bao Bao (宝宝, studbook #241) was a male giant panda born in the wild of Sichuan around 1978. Captured as a juvenile and t...
View profile都都
Du Du is a female giant panda born on January 1, 1962 in the wild of Sichuan Province, China. She was captured as a suba...
View profile佳佳
Jia Jia (佳佳, studbook #230) was a female giant panda born in the wild of Qingchuan, Sichuan around July 1978. Rescued in...
View profile美美
Mei Mei (美美, studbook #217) was a wild-born female giant panda captured in Meigu County, Sichuan in the 1970s. She survi...
View profile佩佩
Pe Pe is a male giant panda born on 1 January 1975 in the wild of Sichuan Province, China. His studbook number is 211, a...
View profile庆庆
Qing Qing (庆庆, studbook #278) was a female giant panda born September 9, 1984 at Chengdu Zoo. She set the world record f...
View profile多惠
Tohui (多惠, studbook #251) was a female giant panda born July 21, 1981 at Mexico City's Chapultepec Zoo — the first giant...
View profile童童
Tong Tong (童童) was the first giant panda conceived and raised entirely in Japan. Born June 1, 1986 at Ueno Zoo to Fei Fe...
View profile冬冬
Winter Winter is a female giant panda born on 1 January 1984 in the wild of the Qinling Mountains. Her studbook number r...
View profile新星
Xin Xing (新星, sb253) was the world's oldest captive giant panda, living to 38 years 4 months. Born wild in Baoxing, Sich...
View profile宣宣
Xuan Xuan is a female giant panda born on 1975-01-01 at wild in the Qinling Mountains of China. She was entered into the...
View profile迎迎
Ying Ying (迎迎, "Welcome") was a wild-born female giant panda from Baoxing County, Sichuan. In 1975, she and her mate Pe ...
View profile争争
Zheng Zheng (争争, studbook #259) was the first giant panda in the world to be successfully hand-reared by humans. Born on...
View profilePanda studbook numbers are assigned by international conservation organizations to uniquely identify each panda in the global population. The generation system groups pandas based on their studbook numbers for easier tracking and analysis.
How it works: Generation 200 includes pandas with studbook numbers from 200 to 299. This grouping helps researchers study population trends, genetic diversity, and breeding success within specific cohorts.
Tracking pandas by generation helps conservationists monitor population health, genetic diversity, and breeding program effectiveness.
Generational data enables longitudinal studies on panda development, health patterns, and adaptation to conservation efforts.
Studbook 1400–1499
16 pandas
Studbook 1300–1399
93 pandas
Studbook 1200–1299
52 pandas
Studbook 1100–1199
47 pandas
Studbook 1000–1099
61 pandas
Studbook 900–999
61 pandas