Conservation efforts appear to be helping China's endangered giant panda
expand its habitat in parts of western China, the Xinhua news agency
reported on Saturday.
Panda cubs play at the Chengdu Research Base of Giant Panda
Breeding in Chengdu, southwest China's Sichuan province, May 24,
2007. [Reuters]
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The animal's droppings were recently discovered in areas beyond its known
habitat in the bamboo forests of the 220,000 hectare (550,000 acre) Baishuijiang
Nature Reserve, on the border of Gansu and Sichuan provinces.
"This indicates an expansion of the giant panda's habitat -- and probably of
its population too," Huang Huali, vice director of the Baishuijiang Nature
Reserve Administration, was quoted as saying.
The pandas have been helped by efforts to curb insect pests, which have
restored the bamboo forests since 2002, Huang said.
China's State Forestry Administration has estimated 1,590 pandas live in the
wild, mostly in the mountains of Sichuan, although a study by Chinese and
British scientists released last year calculated there could be as many as
3,000.