Skip to main content
DA

Panda archive

Da Li

大力

alive male Born July 1, 2010

Da Li is a male giant panda born on 2010-07-01 at Chengdu Research Base of Giant Panda Breeding. He is registered as studbook number 790 in the global giant panda studbook system, and remains alive as of 2024. He is the offspring of Pan Pan and Ya Ya. Pan Pan was a well-documented male giant panda long housed at Chengdu Research Base of Giant Panda Breeding, while Ya Ya is a female giant panda also part of the base’s captive breeding population. Currently living at Beijing Zoo, he participates in the China Giant Panda Conservation Research Program, a national initiative to maintain sustainable captive giant panda populations and support public education about endangered species. He is one of the most frequently visited resident animals at the zoo. As a captive-born giant panda, Da Li displays typical foraging and resting behaviors, spending up to 12 hours daily feeding on bamboo. He draws consistent public attention from domestic and international tourists, serving as a flagship animal for advancing public understanding of giant panda conservation. His placement in a major urban zoo supports outreach efforts that promote habitat protection for wild giant panda populations in the Qinling and Minshan Mountains.

How to use this page

Start with the profile, then expand into the archive around this panda

This page brings together the core facts, timeline, family graph, media, place journey, and related reading for Da Li.

Profile snapshot

Quick facts

Birth date

July 1, 2010

Birth place

Chengdu Research Base of Giant Panda Breeding

Current location

Beijing Zoo

Status

Alive

Studbook

Unassigned

Archive activity

0 updates · 0 media

Narrative

Life story

Start with a concise summary, then continue into the full narrative record for Da Li.

Short version

Da Li is a male giant panda born on 2010-07-01 at Chengdu Research Base of Giant Panda Breeding. He is registered as studbook number 790 in the global giant panda studbook system, and remains alive as of 2024. He is the offspring of Pan Pan and Ya Ya. Pan Pan was a well-documented male giant panda long housed at Chengdu Research Base of Giant Panda Breeding, while Ya Ya is a female giant panda also part of the base’s captive breeding population. Currently living at Beijing Zoo, he participates in the China Giant Panda Conservation Research Program, a national initiative to maintain sustainable captive giant panda populations and support public education about endangered species. He is one of the most frequently visited resident animals at the zoo. As a captive-born giant panda, Da Li displays typical foraging and resting behaviors, spending up to 12 hours daily feeding on bamboo. He draws consistent public attention from domestic and international tourists, serving as a flagship animal for advancing public understanding of giant panda conservation. His placement in a major urban zoo supports outreach efforts that promote habitat protection for wild giant panda populations in the Qinling and Minshan Mountains.

Da Li is a male giant panda born on July 1, 2010, at the Chengdu Research Base of Giant Panda Breeding, with the global giant panda studbook registration number 790. He is the offspring of Pan Pan, a well-documented male giant panda that was a long-term resident of the Chengdu Research Base, and Ya Ya, a female giant panda part of the base’s captive breeding population. As a descendant of two prominent members of the base’s breeding program, his lineage contributes valuable genetic diversity to the global captive giant panda population, a key priority for species conservation efforts. He was transferred to Beijing Zoo on his first birthday, July 1, 2011, and has remained a resident of the zoo as of 2024.

As a participant in the China Giant Panda Conservation Research Program, a national initiative focused on maintaining sustainable captive giant panda populations and supporting endangered species public education, Da Li plays multiple roles in conservation practice. Care teams at Beijing Zoo monitor his daily behavior to support research on captive panda health and welfare, and he exhibits typical species-specific traits, including spending up to 12 hours each day foraging on bamboo. He is consistently one of the most frequently visited animal residents at Beijing Zoo, drawing attention from both domestic and international visitors throughout the year.

His placement in a high-traffic urban zoo makes him a prominent flagship species for giant panda conservation outreach. Public engagement with Da Li supports education efforts that raise awareness of the threats facing wild giant panda populations, including habitat loss and fragmentation in their native ranges in the Qinling and Minshan Mountains of southwest China. His public profile also helps drive public support for targeted habitat protection initiatives and community-based conservation programs designed to support long-term coexistence between wild pandas and human populations in their natural range.

Evidence

Life timeline

Key updates and milestone events tied to Da Li.

0 updates

No updates yet

Check back later for updates about Da Li.

Knowledge graph

Family and network

See the core family graph first, then continue through related pandas and archive themes.

Family tree of Da Li Parents Self Father unknown Mother unknown Da Li 大力 # ♂
🌳

Family relationship data for Da Li is being compiled.

Theme graph

Themes connected to Da Li

This panda is connected to 3 themes in the broader archive graph.

Connected archive

Follow this profile into places, articles, and related pandas

This is the next layer around the profile: place journey, current geography, reading context, and nearby panda records.

Mentioned in archive reading

culture

Chengdu's Fan Economy: How One Panda Fuels an Entire City's Tourism

Hua Hua's celebrity has transformed the Chengdu Research Base from a conservation facility into one of China's most popular tourist destinations. This article examines the 'panda economy' — how a single charismatic animal drives millions in ticket sales, hotel bookings, merchandise revenue, and social media engagement, and what this phenomenon reveals about the economic power of animal celebrity.

culture

A Rare Infection, A Sudden Death: The Chlamydia Case at Chimelong

In May 2026, Guangzhou Chimelong Safari Park confirmed that Jia He (家和, studbook #972), a 10-year-old male giant panda, died from heart failure caused by a pulmonary chlamydia infection — a diagnosis so unusual that it may be the first documented fatal chlamydia case in a giant panda worldwide. This article examines the clinical timeline, the microbiology behind the infection, the investigation into possible transmission sources, and the broader implications for captive panda health management at one of China's largest panda facilities.

culture

Dujiangyan Panda Nursing Home: Where Hero Pandas Retire

In the quiet foothills outside Chengdu, the Dujiangyan Giant Panda Rescue and Disease Control Center serves as both a state-of-the-art panda hospital and a peaceful retirement community for aging pandas. Mei Xiang, Tian Tian, and other retired breeding pandas and overseas returnees spend their final years here, receiving specialized geriatric care and living in quiet forested enclosures far from the crowds.

culture

Historic Wild Panda Rescues: Basi, Qi Zai, and Other Survivors

Some of the most famous pandas in history were found near death in the wild — starving, injured, or abandoned — and rescued by villagers and rangers who carried them to safety. This article tells the stories of the most dramatic panda rescues: Basi, rescued from an icy river; Qi Zai, the abandoned brown cub; and others whose survival against the odds became the foundation stories of modern panda conservation.

More connections

Browse nearby, regional, and fast-moving panda profiles related to this archive entry.

Same place

Bai Tian

白天

Alive
7 years old
beijing_zoo

Bai Tian (白天, studbook #1158) is a female giant panda born August 20, 2018 at the Wolong Shenshuping Base. Daughter of L...

View profile

Da Di

大地

Deceased
33 years old
beijing_zoo

Da Di (大地, studbook #394) was a male giant panda born September 22, 1992 at Wolong. Son of Pan Pan (盼盼) and Dong Dong (冬...

View profile

Gu Gu

古古

Alive
26 years old
beijing_zoo

Gu Gu (古古, studbook #423) is a wild-born male giant panda rescued from the Qinling Mountains in 1999. Transferred to Bei...

View profile

Same country

A Bao

阿宝

Alive
15 years old
chengdu_base

A Bao is a male giant panda born on September 7, 2010 at Madrid Zoo, the first giant panda conceived through artificial ...

View profile

A Bao

阿宝

Alive
14 years old
chengdu_base

A Bao is a male giant panda born on 2011-09-04 at the Chengdu Research Base of Giant Panda Breeding. He is the offspring...

View profile

A Bao

阿宝

Alive
15 years old
chengdu_base

A Bao (also known as Bao Lan) is a female giant panda born on November 3, 2010 at Atlanta Zoo. Initially mistaken for ma...

View profile

Trending pandas

Bing Xing

冰星

Alive
25 years old
chengdu_base

Bing Xing is a male giant panda born on September 1, 2000 at Chengdu Research Base. He lived at Hangzhou Wildlife Park (...

View profile
Photo of Cheng Hehua

Cheng Hehua

成和花

Alive
5 years old
chengdu_base

Cheng Hehua (Hua Hua, 花花), nicknamed "Fruit Lai" (果赖) because she responds to this Sichuan dialect call, is China's top...

celebrity twin captive-bred +5
View profile

Trust

Sources and references

Information on this page is compiled from conservation institutions, official panda records, media archives, and the wider PandaCommon research workflow.

Primary source types

  • Conservation institution records
  • Official panda databases
  • Research publications and archive reporting

External links

No external reference links are attached yet.

Continue through the panda archive

Move from this profile into more pandas, place histories, and the wider library.

Explore over 758 panda profiles, place links, and archive journeys.