Animals and Human

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duration: 1 Hour and 40 Minute

Watch: A new panda born at the Taipei Zoo in China

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Video prices: IQD 240/day

The Taipei Zoo announced on Monday that a giant panda presented to Taiwan by China gave birth to a second female cub after being artificially inseminated. The zoo said the cub, which has not yet received a name, was born on Sunday and weighs about 186 grams. He did not receive care from his mother due to her fatigue from giving birth. The newborn cub is being cared for and is in stable condition, after being treated for a minor injury to his back. The first giant panda was born in Taiwan in 2013, in a rare departure from Chinese protocol to loan out pandas, sending any offspring to China but Taiwan was allowed to keep Yuan Zai, as a symbolic gesture when the self-governing island was run by the Beijing-friendly Kuomintang administration. It is worth noting that there are less than 1,600 pandas in the world, most of them in the Chinese province of Sichuan, with about 300 pandas confined in suitable environments to prevent their extinction around the world.

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