Germany’s newest panda twins thrive during early days in Berlin Zoo
The cubs have spent their first few days of life feeding and cuddling their mother, Meng Meng.
Germany’s newest panda twins are thriving at Berlin Zoo.
The cubs spent their first five days of life taking turns cuddling and drinking milk from their mother every hour.
They were born on Thursday to 11-year-old mother Meng Meng. The zoo said it is cautiously optimistic during this critical period – panda cub mortality is at its highest within the first two weeks of birth and through the first month, because they do not yet have a functioning immune system.
So the zoo has stepped in with a team that includes experts from China’s Chengdu Research Base of Giant Panda Breeding, who are on a visit to Berlin.
When one of the twins is with their mother, the other is spending time in an incubator donated by a Berlin hospital.
China has donated its unofficial mascot to other countries for decades as part of a “panda diplomacy” policy. The country now loans pandas to zoos on commercial terms. There are about 1,800 pandas living in the wild in China and a few hundred in captivity worldwide.
Currently deaf, blind and pink – their black-and-white panda markings will develop later – the firstborn twin now weighs 180 grams, while the second is roughly 145 grams (6.35 and 5.11 ounces).
Meng Meng was artificially inseminated on March 26. Female pandas are fertile only for a few days per year at the most. The twins’ father, 14-year-old Jiao Qing, is not involved in rearing the cubs.
Meng Meng and Jiao Qing arrived in Berlin in 2017. In August 2019, Meng Meng gave birth to male twins Pit and Paule, also known by the Chinese names Meng Xiang and Meng Yuan, the first giant pandas born in Germany.
Those twins flew to China in December on a journey that was delayed by the Covid-19 pandemic but had been contractually agreed to from the beginning.