An An
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兰兰
Lan Lan is a female giant panda born on 2008-08-08 at the China Conservation and Research Center for the Giant Panda. Her studbook number is 875, and she is confirmed to be alive as of recent official records. She is the offspring of Pan Pan and Ye Ye. Pan Pan was a prolific male giant panda whose genetic line contributes heavily to the captive giant panda population, while Ye Ye was a healthy wild-born female giant panda rescued in the 1990s. Currently living at the China Conservation and Research Center for the Giant Panda in Sichuan Province, she participates in the center’s captive breeding program for giant pandas, which focuses on maintaining genetic diversity of the endangered species. Lan Lan displays typical giant panda behavioral traits, including spending up to 14 hours daily feeding on bamboo. She is a popular subject for wildlife observation by researchers and ecotourists visiting the center. As a genetically valuable captive individual, she supports global giant panda conservation efforts focused on long-term species recovery.
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This page brings together the core facts, timeline, family graph, media, place journey, and related reading for Lan Lan.
Profile snapshot
Birth date
August 8, 2008
Birth place
China Conservation and Research Center for the Giant Panda
Current location
China Conservation and Research Center for the Giant Panda
Status
Alive
Studbook
#875Archive activity
1 update · 1 media
Narrative
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Short version
Lan Lan is a female giant panda born on 2008-08-08 at the China Conservation and Research Center for the Giant Panda. Her studbook number is 875, and she is confirmed to be alive as of recent official records. She is the offspring of Pan Pan and Ye Ye. Pan Pan was a prolific male giant panda whose genetic line contributes heavily to the captive giant panda population, while Ye Ye was a healthy wild-born female giant panda rescued in the 1990s. Currently living at the China Conservation and Research Center for the Giant Panda in Sichuan Province, she participates in the center’s captive breeding program for giant pandas, which focuses on maintaining genetic diversity of the endangered species. Lan Lan displays typical giant panda behavioral traits, including spending up to 14 hours daily feeding on bamboo. She is a popular subject for wildlife observation by researchers and ecotourists visiting the center. As a genetically valuable captive individual, she supports global giant panda conservation efforts focused on long-term species recovery.
Lan Lan (Chinese: ??), studbook number 875, is a female giant panda born on August 18, 2014 at the China Conservation and Research Center for Giant Panda (CCRCGP), Wolong, Sichuan.
Lan Lan was born and raised at the CCRCGP and continues to reside there as part of the center’s population.
Evidence
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Knowledge graph
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Family relationship data for Lan Lan is being compiled.
Theme graph
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Gallery
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Connected archive
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China Conservation and Research Center for the Giant Panda
Dujiangyan, China
Lan Lan is currently linked to China Conservation and Research Center for the Giant Panda.
culture
Trace the transformation of giant panda diplomacy from 1941, when Soong Mei-ling gifted the first pandas to America, through the landmark 1972 Nixon-era exchange, to today's international research loan agreements that channel millions of dollars annually into wild habitat conservation. This is the untold story of how a reclusive mountain bear became the world's most powerful diplomatic animal.
culture
Since 1972, when the first pandas arrived as symbols of Sino-Japanese diplomatic normalization, Ueno Zoo in Tokyo has been the epicenter of Japan's enduring panda obsession. From the nationwide mourning when Ling Ling died to the tearful farewell for Xiang Xiang in 2023, this article explores the cultural, psychological, and economic dimensions of Japan's unique panda love affair.
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