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TAI

Panda archive

Tai Shan

泰山

alive male Born July 9, 2005

Tai Shan (泰山, studbook #595) is a male giant panda born July 9, 2005 at the Smithsonian National Zoo in Washington D.C. He currently lives at the China Conservation and Research Center for the Giant Panda. His parentage is not documented in publicly available studbook records.

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

Profile snapshot

Quick facts

Birth date

July 9, 2005

Birth place

Smithsonian National Zoological Park

Current location

China Conservation and Research Center for the Giant Panda

Status

Alive

Studbook

#595

Archive activity

3 updates · 1 media

Narrative

Life story

Start with a concise summary, then continue into the full narrative record for Tai Shan.

Short version

Tai Shan (泰山, studbook #595) is a male giant panda born July 9, 2005 at the Smithsonian National Zoo in Washington D.C. He currently lives at the China Conservation and Research Center for the Giant Panda. His parentage is not documented in publicly available studbook records.

Basic Profile

Tai Shan (Chinese name: 泰山, studbook number 595) is a male giant panda born on July 9, 2005 at the Smithsonian National Zoological Park in Washington, D.C., USA. He is the first giant panda cub born at the facility to survive past infancy, and the offspring of Tian Tian (添添, studbook 466) and Mei Xiang (美香, studbook 461), who were on long-term loan from China.

Early Life at the Smithsonian

Tai Shan’s birth sparked an unprecedented wave of “panda fever” across the United States. An online naming contest drew over 200,000 voters from around the world, ultimately selecting “Tai Shan” (泰山), named after the sacred Chinese mountain. The name was translated into English as “Peace Mountain.” His first public appearance on December 22, 2005 drew 12,000 visitors; all 13,000 free tickets were claimed within two hours, with resale prices reaching several hundred dollars on eBay.

His image appeared on Washington D.C. Metro fare cards, replacing even President Obama’s inauguration design. A sneezing video of Tai Shan posted on YouTube accumulated over 51 million views. The zoo’s panda cam received over 21 million cumulative views during his early years. Washington Mayor Anthony Williams declared him “the most important resident of Washington.”

Extended Stay in the U.S.

Under the original Sino-US agreement, Tai Shan was to return to China at age two (2007). However, overwhelming public demand led China to grant two extensions — first a two-year extension until 2009, then an additional six months. Washington Mayor Adrian Fenty declared April 24, 2007 as “Panda Day” in the city. School children across 40 states raised $16,000 through a “Change for Pandas” campaign.

Return to China

On February 5, 2010, Tai Shan flew aboard the “FedEx Panda Express” Boeing 777 alongside Mei Lan (美兰, studbook 649) from Washington Dulles to Chengdu. Upon arrival, he was transferred to the Bifengxia Base in Ya’an, joining the “Overseas Returnee Panda Paradise.” In 2024, he was relocated to the Shenshuping Panda Base in Wolong.

Life in China

Tai Shan has participated in the China Conservation and Research Center’s breeding program since his return. While he has not produced offspring as prolifically as some other males, he remains an important genetic contributor and a beloved public figure. He celebrated his 12th birthday at Bifengxia in 2017 with a special cake and well-wishes from fans worldwide, and continues to serve as a symbol of Sino-American cooperation.

Evidence

Life timeline

Key updates and milestone events tied to Tai Shan.

3 updates

Knowledge graph

Family and network

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

Family tree of Tai Shan Parents Self Father unknown Mother unknown Tai Shan 泰山 #595 ♂
🌳

Family relationship data for Tai Shan is being compiled.

Theme graph

Themes connected to Tai Shan

This panda is connected to 4 themes in the broader archive graph.

Connected archive

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

Mentioned in archive reading

culture

Bifengxia Base: The First Stop for Every Returning Overseas Panda

Nestled in the misty mountains above Ya'an, Sichuan, the Bifengxia Panda Base is the quiet epicenter of the global panda diaspora — the place every overseas-born panda first encounters when it returns to China. With its cool climate, abundant bamboo, and specialized quarantine facilities, Bifengxia has processed every major panda homecoming of the modern era, from Tai Shan in 2010 to Fu Bao in 2024.

culture

The Great Return: Why Overseas-Born Pandas Must Come Home

Every panda born outside China must return by age four — a clause that shapes the emotional landscape of international panda cooperation. From Tai Shan (2005) to Fu Bao (2024), this article traces the biological, legal, and emotional dimensions of the panda homecoming, examining what happens when an overseas-born panda lands in Chengdu and must learn to be a Chinese panda.

culture

Pan Pan's Dynasty: The Hero Father Behind 25% of All Captive Pandas

Studbook #001. 130+ descendants. 25% of the global captive population. Pan Pan was the most genetically prolific giant panda in history — rescued from the wild as a cub, he became the founding sire who rescued the captive breeding program from collapse. This is the story of the panda who became a dynasty, the genetic legacy that now defines a quarter of all captive pandas, and the complex management challenge his extraordinary reproductive success created.

culture

80 Years of Panda Diplomacy: From Wartime Gifts to Global Research Loans

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.

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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

External links

No external reference links are attached yet.

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