Zoo Berlin getting ready to welcome newborn panda cubs

Source:Xinhua Published: 2019/8/15 11:06:36

Photo taken on Aug. 14, 2019 shows panda Meng Meng at the Zoo Berlin in Berlin, capital of Germany. Zoo Berlin is getting ready to welcome one or two newborn panda cubs as experts say it's very likely that the 6-year-old panda Meng Meng is pregnant. (Xinhua/Shan Yuqi)


 

Thomas Hildebrandt, head of the reproduction management department at Germany's Leibniz Institute for Zoo and Wildlife Research, points the position of the embryo during a press conference at the Zoo Berlin in Berlin, capital of Germany, on Aug. 14, 2019. Zoo Berlin is getting ready to welcome one or two newborn panda cubs as experts say it's very likely that the 6-year-old panda Meng Meng is pregnant. (Xinhua/Shan Yuqi)


 

Director of Zoo Berlin Andreas Knieriem (C) and experts from Germany's Leibniz Institute for Zoo and Wildlife Research attend a press conference at the Zoo Berlin in Berlin, capital of Germany, on Aug. 14, 2019. Zoo Berlin is getting ready to welcome one or two newborn panda cubs as experts say it's very likely that the 6-year-old panda Meng Meng is pregnant. (Xinhua/Shan Yuqi)


 

Photo taken on Aug. 14, 2019 shows panda Meng Meng at the Zoo Berlin in Berlin, capital of Germany. Zoo Berlin is getting ready to welcome one or two newborn panda cubs as experts say it's very likely that the 6-year-old panda Meng Meng is pregnant. (Xinhua/Shan Yuqi)


 

Panda Meng Meng plays at the Zoo Berlin in Berlin, capital of Germany, on Aug. 14, 2019. Zoo Berlin is getting ready to welcome one or two newborn panda cubs as experts say it's very likely that the 6-year-old panda Meng Meng is pregnant. (Xinhua/Shan Yuqi)


 
Zoo Berlin, dubbed the most species-rich zoo worldwide, is getting ready to welcome one or two newborn panda cubs as experts say it's very likely that the 6-year-old panda Meng Meng is pregnant.

The panda couple, Meng Meng and Jiao Qing, sent by China in 2017, mated in April and later artificial insemination was also performed on Meng Meng to boost the likelihood of pregnancy, the Zoo announced at a press conference here on Wednesday.

Meng Meng's altered behavior hinted a pregnancy, and ultrasound images and hormone tests have also provided extra reasons to expect a panda cub in a few weeks' time, said Zoo Berlin, known as Germany's oldest zoological garden, home to almost 20,2 zoo berlin 00 animals of around 1,380 species.

Germany's Leibniz Institute for Zoo and Wildlife Research (IZW) is conducting regular examinations on Meng Meng. Thomas Hildebrandt, head of the reproduction management department at IZW, said the most recent test on Wednesday showed that Meng Meng's ovaries are activated, her uterus becomes much larger, and a small bulge is visible that could be one or two embryos.

"Although phantom pregnancies are relatively common in giant pandas, at the moment we are around 85 percent sure that Meng Meng is actually expecting," said Hildebrandt.

Moreover, experts say that Meng Meng's recent lethargy, lack of appetite and shunning contact with humans are all signs of her being pregnant.

After consulting with IZW, the Zoo Berlin is now preparing for a birth at the Panda House, and two experts from China will arrive in Berlin this week to lend their support. If everything works well, the birth of new panda cub will take place in late August or early September.

Andreas Knieriem, director of Zoo Berlin, told Xinhua that only when they see a pumping heart of fetus can they be more sure. "Never in the history of Berlin that such stage of a pregnancy of giant pandas is achieved, so we are very hopeful," he added.

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