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家园
Jia Yuan (家园, studbook #1119) is a wild-born female giant panda rescued on the night of November 30, 2017, when she stumbled into a villager's home in Hongya County, Sichuan. Emaciated, disabled, and near death, her rescue was a community effort — experts sedated her while neighbors carried her on bedsheets. Against the odds, she survived and is now a mother at the Chengdu Research Base.
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Profile snapshot
Birth date
January 1, 1999
Birth place
Wild Habitat (Minshan/Qionglai)
Current location
Chengdu Research Base of Giant Panda Breeding
Status
Alive
Studbook
#1119Archive activity
1 update · 0 media
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Short version
Jia Yuan (家园, studbook #1119) is a wild-born female giant panda rescued on the night of November 30, 2017, when she stumbled into a villager's home in Hongya County, Sichuan. Emaciated, disabled, and near death, her rescue was a community effort — experts sedated her while neighbors carried her on bedsheets. Against the odds, she survived and is now a mother at the Chengdu Research Base.
Jia Yuan (Chinese: 家园, meaning “Homeland”), studbook number 1119, is a wild-born female giant panda. When she was rescued in November 2017, experts estimated her age at 16–20 years, placing her birth around the late 1990s. Her exact origins in the wilds of Sichuan’s mountains are unknown.
On the evening of November 30, 2017, a villager named Li Wanfang in Hongya County’s Wawushan Township, Meishan, Sichuan, found a giant panda collapsed on his property. The animal was in shocking condition — skin stretched tight over bone, barely moving. He immediately contacted the authorities.
Experts from the Sichuan Wildlife Protection Center rushed to the remote mountain location. After assessing the steep terrain, they decided sedation was the only safe option. Once the panda was under anesthesia, local villagers stepped in. Working together, they carefully lifted her onto a bedsheet and carried her into Li Wanfang’s home for emergency treatment.
By 12:10 AM on December 1, she had been moved to the village party secretary’s house, where the rescue team conducted a thorough examination. The findings were grim:
She was deemed too weak for immediate transport. The team administered emergency care on-site for several hours, stabilizing her enough to survive the journey.
Later that morning, she was transferred to the Chengdu Research Base’s Luojiaqou Rescue Center. There, she received intensive veterinary care. Due to her permanently disabled front paws, which made foraging and self-feeding impossible, she could not be released back to the wild. She became a permanent resident of the Chengdu Research Base.
Jia Yuan’s name — 家园 (Homeland) — reflects her journey from the wild to a safe home. Against all expectations given her age and physical condition, she adapted well to captive life.
On July 10, 2022, in what keepers describe as a quiet miracle, Jia Yuan gave birth to a healthy female cub. The cub was named Jia Xin (家欣), sharing the “Jia” (home) character with her mother. Jia Xin quickly became an internet favorite, known for her habit of hanging motionless from tree branches — earning her the nickname “the hanging-on-tree baby” (挂树小熊).
Jia Yuan’s story — from a dying wild panda carried on a bedsheet by villagers, to a mother raising a healthy cub — stands as one of the most remarkable rescue stories in the Chengdu Base’s history.
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Chengdu Research Base of Giant Panda Breeding
Chengdu, China
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