Skip to content

Travel Bug Dog Tag TB-Panda Bear Cub

Trackable Options
Found this item? Log in.
Printable information sheet to attach to TB-Panda Bear Cub Print Info Sheet
Owner:
Nemodidi Send Message to Owner Message this owner
Released:
Monday, October 6, 2008
Origin:
New Brunswick, Canada
Recently Spotted:
Unknown Location

The owner hasn't set their collectible preference.

Use TB2A2ZF to reference this item.

First time logging a Trackable? Click here.

Current Goal

To Travel around the world, going from cache to cache, from geocacher to geocacher. Pls move it around as soon as possible. TB-Panda Bear Cub wants people to know about his species. Pictures of this TB's adventures are more than welcome!

About This Item

Panda cub

The Giant Panda (Ailuropoda melanoleuca, "black-and-white cat-foot") is a mammal classified in the bear family (Ursidae), native to central-western and southwestern China. The Giant Panda lives in a few mountain ranges in central China, in Sichuan, Shaanxi, and Gansu provinces. It once lived in lowland areas, but farming, forest clearing, and other development now restrict the Giant Panda to the mountains. China has 239 Giant Pandas in captivity and another 27 living outside the country. It also estimated that around 1,590 pandas are currently living in the wild. A large adult panda can weigh about 100-150 kg. They have a white coat with black fur around their eyes, on their ears, muzzle, legs and shoulders. The unique physical features of the species include broad, flat molars and an enlarged wrist bone that functions as an opposable thumb - both of these adaptations are used for holding, crushing and eating bamboo. The diet of pandas consists almost entirely of the leaves, stems, and shoots of various bamboo species. It consumes 12-38 kg of bamboo a day to meet its energy requirements. Bamboo die-back is a natural phenomenon, occurring every 15-120 years depending on the type of bamboo. Once the bamboo dies it can take a year to regenerate from seed and as long as 20 years before a new crop can support a giant panda population. Bamboo die-back may have helped to disperse giant pandas in the distant past, as individuals migrated to seek areas with other species of bamboo, but now human settlements form a barrier against giant panda movements.
Today, the giant panda's future remains uncertain. This peaceful member of the bear family faces a number of threats. Its forest habitat, in the mountainous areas of southwest China, is fragmented and giant panda populations are small and isolated from each other. Meanwhile, poaching remains an ever-present threat. Even at low levels, this activity can have grave consequences for such an endangered species.
Unfortunately this is another of the top 10 endangered species on planet earth! There is a lot of information available on the Giant Panda, you can also visit the internet site: (visit link)

Gallery Images related to TB-Panda Bear Cub

View All 6 Gallery Images

Tracking History (50793mi) View Map

Discovered It 8/24/2016 Olienh discovered it   Visit Log

Sett på event på Egon. Takk!

Retrieve It from a Cache 8/24/2016 HeBokn retrieved it from 1-2-3-4-5-6-7-8-9-TI TUSEN! Rogaland, Norway   Visit Log

Tok den med videre fra event.

Discovered It 8/22/2016 Kjetil G discovered it   Visit Log

I saw this at an event, forgot to log it but I had a picture of it on my phone.

Discovered It 8/22/2016 Engel C discovered it   Visit Log

sett på event

Discovered It 8/22/2016 Bygnesen discovered it   Visit Log

Sett på eventet 1-2-3-4-5-6-7-8-9-TI TUSEN!

Discovered It 8/22/2016 jkstolen discovered it   Visit Log

sett på event

Dropped Off 8/22/2016 GadgetCats placed it in 1-2-3-4-5-6-7-8-9-TI TUSEN! Rogaland, Norway - 53.93 miles  Visit Log
Visited 8/20/2016 GadgetCats took it to ROGEO 2016 Rogaland, Norway - 29.31 miles  Visit Log
Visited 8/17/2016 GadgetCats took it to Kvitsøy Kirke Rogaland, Norway - 129.3 miles  Visit Log
Retrieve It from a Cache 8/12/2016 GadgetCats retrieved it from 👣12 Stammtisch i Norra Bohuslän Västra Götaland, Sweden   Visit Log

Come with us to Explore more of Norway.

data on this page is cached for 3 mins