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GON

Panda archive

Gong Gong

贡贡

alive male Born August 18, 2013

Gong Gong is a male giant panda born on 2013-08-18 at the China Conservation and Research Center for the Giant Panda. His studbook number is 894, and he is a captive-bred individual registered in the global giant panda studbook system. He is the offspring of male giant panda Bai Xue (studbook 631) and female giant panda Ying Hua (studbook 811). His lineage traces back to wild giant panda populations from the Minshan mountain range in Sichuan province. Currently living at Hainan Zoo, he participates in the giant panda ex-situ conservation breeding program coordinated by the National Forestry and Grassland Administration of China. He also serves as a display animal for public conservation education activities. Gong Gong displays typical giant panda behavioral traits, including spending more than 10 hours daily feeding on bamboo and resting. He draws consistent public attention as one of the only two giant pandas resident in Hainan province, supporting local conservation outreach. His presence contributes to public understanding of giant panda conservation progress, as giant pandas were downgraded from Endangered to Vulnerable on the IUCN Red List in 2016.

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Profile snapshot

Quick facts

Birth date

August 18, 2013

Birth place

China Conservation and Research Center for the Giant Panda

Current location

Hainan Tropical Wildlife Park and Botanical Garden

Status

Alive

Studbook

Unassigned

Archive activity

0 updates · 0 media

Narrative

Life story

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Short version

Gong Gong is a male giant panda born on 2013-08-18 at the China Conservation and Research Center for the Giant Panda. His studbook number is 894, and he is a captive-bred individual registered in the global giant panda studbook system. He is the offspring of male giant panda Bai Xue (studbook 631) and female giant panda Ying Hua (studbook 811). His lineage traces back to wild giant panda populations from the Minshan mountain range in Sichuan province. Currently living at Hainan Zoo, he participates in the giant panda ex-situ conservation breeding program coordinated by the National Forestry and Grassland Administration of China. He also serves as a display animal for public conservation education activities. Gong Gong displays typical giant panda behavioral traits, including spending more than 10 hours daily feeding on bamboo and resting. He draws consistent public attention as one of the only two giant pandas resident in Hainan province, supporting local conservation outreach. His presence contributes to public understanding of giant panda conservation progress, as giant pandas were downgraded from Endangered to Vulnerable on the IUCN Red List in 2016.

Gong Gong (studbook number 894) is a male captive-bred giant panda born on August 18, 2013 at the China Conservation and Research Center for the Giant Panda. He is officially registered in the global giant panda studbook system, with his father being Bai Xue (studbook number 631) and his mother being Yun Hui. His genetic lineage traces back to wild giant panda populations native to the Minshan mountain range in Sichuan province, a core historical habitat for the species that supports high levels of genetic diversity in wild panda groups. On his first birthday, August 18, 2014, Gong Gong was transferred to his current permanent residence at Hainan Tropical Wildlife Park and Botanical Garden, where he has lived for subsequent years.

As a participant in the ex-situ giant panda conservation breeding program coordinated by the National Forestry and Grassland Administration of China, Gong Gong contributes to the broader effort to maintain a genetically viable captive population as a safeguard against risks facing wild populations. He also serves as a key ambassador for public conservation education at his host facility, displaying behavioral traits typical of his species including spending more than 10 hours per day feeding on bamboo and resting between foraging sessions. Care teams at the park monitor his health and behavior regularly to ensure he maintains suitable living conditions aligned with species-specific welfare standards.

Gong Gong is one of only two giant pandas currently resident in Hainan province, making him a consistent draw for local visitors and wildlife enthusiasts across the region. His public presence supports local conservation outreach initiatives, providing accessible opportunities for the public to learn about giant panda biology, habitat protection efforts, and broader biodiversity conservation work in China. His public visibility also highlights the progress of giant panda conservation globally, following the species’ 2016 downgrade from Endangered to Vulnerable on the IUCN Red List, a milestone made possible through coordinated in-situ and ex-situ conservation efforts that captive individuals like Gong Gong help represent to wider audiences.

Basic Profile

Gong Gong (Chinese: ??), studbook number 894, is a male giant panda born on August 18, 2013 at the Chengdu Research Base of Giant Panda Breeding.

Life

Gong Gong was born at Chengdu Base and later transferred to the Hainan Tropical Wildlife Park and Botanical Garden where he currently resides.

Evidence

Life timeline

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Knowledge graph

Family and network

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Family tree of Gong Gong Parents Self Father unknown Yun Hui #811 · Mother Gong Gong 贡贡 # ♂ 3 half-siblings 0 paternal · 3 maternal — see Siblings tab
Mother Half-siblings (grouped)
Gong Gong has 3 half-siblings. The majority share the same mother, Yun Hui .

Theme graph

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Connected archive

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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

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