Skip to main content

Advertisement

Advertisement

Vienna zoo hails rare birth of tiny giant panda twins

VIENNA — A giant panda on loan from China to Austria has given birth to two naturally conceived twins, an exceptionally rare event for the endangered species, Vienna’s famous Schoenbrunn Zoo said on Tuesday (Aug 16).

A video grab of panda mother Yang Yang holding her twins. The two baby pandas were born at the zoo on Aug 7, 2016. Photo: Tiergarten Schönbrunn via AFP

A video grab of panda mother Yang Yang holding her twins. The two baby pandas were born at the zoo on Aug 7, 2016. Photo: Tiergarten Schönbrunn via AFP

Follow TODAY on WhatsApp

VIENNA — A giant panda on loan from China to Austria has given birth to two naturally conceived twins, an exceptionally rare event for the endangered species, Vienna’s famous Schoenbrunn Zoo said on Tuesday (Aug 16).

Measuring around 15 centimetres, the pink, hairless cubs arrived on August 7, it announced in a statement.

Initially the zoo thought mother Yang Yang had only given birth to one panda because the delivery happened inside a dark nesting box and was only observed via an infrared camera.

More than a week passed before zookeepers realised there was a second one.

“The cubs have little round bellies and panda mummy Yang Yang is very relaxed,” zoologist Eveline Dungl said.

“You rarely see them because Yang Yang constantly warms them between her paws... What you can hear very clearly are their suckling and grunting noises when she feeds or licks them.”

In accordance with Chinese tradition, the cubs will only be named after 100 days because up to 50 per cent of newborns do not survive, Ms Dungl explained.

But so far the siblings, which are being monitored around the clock, are doing very well, she added.

Female pandas are only fertile for a couple of days every year.

Yang Yang and her partner Long Hui, both aged 16, are already the proud parents of Fu Long, Fu Hu and Fu Bao, born in 2007, 2010 and 2013 respectively — and all conceived naturally.

The twins are expected to have their first public outing in four months’ time. AFP

Read more of the latest in

Advertisement

Advertisement

Stay in the know. Anytime. Anywhere.

Subscribe to get daily news updates, insights and must reads delivered straight to your inbox.

By clicking subscribe, I agree for my personal data to be used to send me TODAY newsletters, promotional offers and for research and analysis.