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First giant pandas in decades unveiled at San Diego Zoo. Newsom declares California Panda Day

Xin Bao, one of two giant pandas sent from China to the San Diego Zoo, arrived in late June.  (Ken Bohn/San Diego Zoo Wildlife Alliance/TNS)
By Rosanna Xia Los Angeles Times

LOS ANGELES – California’s state animal might be the grizzly bear, but today is another bear’s big moment to shine.

Gov. Gavin Newsom has declared Aug. 8, 2024, to be California Panda Day – a playful (but also politically significant) nod to Thursday’s public debut of two giant pandas, Yun Chuan and Xin Bao, at the San Diego Zoo.

These two pandas, in a gesture of goodwill from China, are the first to be sent to the United States in more than two decades.

“This conservation collaboration is part of California and China’s long history of working together toward shared goals,” said Newsom, who is expected to visit the zoo in the morning. “Building on our strong foundation of partnership and deep cultural and economic ties, I traveled to China last year to advance priority issues including climate action and economic development.

“We hope that the newly arrived panda ‘envoys of friendship’ will lead to further exchanges and cooperation between California and China,” he added, in his official proclamation of California Panda Day.

Yun Chuan and Xin Bao arrived in San Diego in June after a collaborative conservation agreement reignited a “panda diplomacy” between China and the U.S. that had appeared to falter for a few years.

For more than five decades, beginning in 1972, China has lent pandas to zoos across the U.S. as “envoys of friendship,” but doubts about the future of these loans grew in 2019 after the San Diego Zoo returned its last giant pandas to China. The Memphis Zoo and the Smithsonian’s National Zoo have also sent back several pandas in recent years, when their multiyear agreements were up.

San Diego is a particularly meaningful place to ring in this next era of panda diplomacy. The San Diego Zoo Wildlife Alliance was the first organization in the nation to establish a cooperative panda conservation program, and researchers there have since made significant contributions to our scientific understanding of how to nurture such a keystone species.

One of the new pandas, Yun Chuan, in fact, is the son of Zhen Zhen, a female panda born at the San Diego Zoo in 2007.

At almost 5 years old, Yun Chuan is identifiable by his long, pointy nose. He has an active personality, but he is also known to be gentle and sensitive to others. He’s serious about his bamboo but will always let other pandas go first, according to his wildlife care specialists.

Xin Bao, the smaller of the two, has a large, round face and big, fluffy ears that help set her apart from other pandas. She is almost 4 years old and naturally playful – her caretakers have said she is witty and curious, and has proved to be an excellent climber and will even roughhouse a bit with other pandas.

Their new home, the newly expanded “Panda Ridge” at the San Diego Zoo, has been designed to reflect the sweeping mountains, canyons and cliffs of China’s Sichuan, Gansu and Shaanxi provinces. Four times larger than the zoo’s previous panda habitat, this reimagined space also features shade trees for climbing and rolling hillsides for Yun Chuan and Xin Bao to explore.

People wishing to see the new pandas can do so in several ways: Obtain a complimentary timed ticket on the day of your visit, join a standby line in person, or reserve an exclusive 60-minute “Early Morning With Pandas Walking Tour.” Additional information can be found on the zoo’s website.