Number of captive pandas in China reach 548: Official
After decades of caring for giant pandas, China's panda experts have created sound conditions to raise and breed giant pandas, whose numbers have reached 548, state run Global Times on Friday reported.

The number of pandas living in the wild was fewer than 2,000, according to official data in 2013.
After decades of caring for giant pandas, China's panda experts have created sound conditions to raise and breed giant pandas, whose numbers have reached 548, state run Global Times on Friday reported.
Citing quoting a press release of State Forestry and Grassland Administrations (SFGA), it said that 45 of 48 panda cubs born in captivity this year survived.
In the 1990s, the survival rate of captive-born cubs was only 30 per cent.
Li Chunliang, vice administrator of the SFGA, said on Thursday that scientists are looking to expand the genetic diversity in their breeding pairs of pandas by avoiding mating pandas that share blood ties.
In 2016, a giant panda named He Sheng was found dead two months after it had been released into the wild. It had been attacked by "unknown animals," said the Chengdu Research Base of Giant Panda Breeding at the time. Media reported four of the released-to-the-wild pandas have not survived.
The incidents sparked heated discussions, with netizens worried the giant pandas could not survive after being released into the wild.
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