Edinburgh Zoo is in negotiations to bring a pair of giant pandas from China to Scotland.
Zoo representatives recently returned from China, where they signed a letter of intent signifying a commitment to bring giant pandas to Edinburgh.
It has been proposed that a breeding pair would be on loan to the Royal Zoological Society of Scotland (RZSS) for 10 years.
It is hoped they would give birth to cubs during that time.
However, one campaign group has criticised the move.
Libby Anderson, a spokeswoman for Advocates for Animals, said: “We always have reservations about captive breeding programmes because they don’t have a very high rate of success. If you’re going to carry out breeding programmes, do it in the wild.
“The pandas were described in the press as a great crowd-puller. You have to ask what is the priority here for the zoo - is it to pull in crowds, to use animals for entertainment or a realistic endeavour to save pandas?”
‘Ensure survival’
Edinburgh would be only the eighth zoo in the Western hemisphere to care for the species if the project goes ahead.
Zoo chiefs said that looking after the endangered animals could benefit conservation.
David Windmill, chief executive of RZSS, said: “Working with giant pandas means so much more to us than introducing a new species to our collection.
“It is an opportunity to work on a global level with other conservationists to gain a better understanding of the giant panda, the threats they face, and what we can do to ensure their survival.”
There are currently only around 1,500 giant pandas in the wild.
RZSS has been working on the project for almost a year, and hopes to have giant pandas at Edinburgh Zoo by 2009, the year of the society’s centenary.
Mr Windmill said that the project had received strong support from the UK and Scottish Governments and that this must continue if the zoo is to reach an agreement with the Chinese.
As part of the proposed agreement with the Chinese government, Edinburgh Zoo will collaborate on research projects benefiting conservation in the wild.
RZSS will also provide substantial funding to support giant panda conservation projects in the wild.
Giant pandas live in a few mountain ranges in central China and feed almost exclusively on bamboo, which makes up 99% of their diet.
Hundreds of dams around the epicenter of China’s earthquake have been damaged and Chinese troops scrambled Wednesday to plug cracks and open sluices to prevent flooding of already devastated communities.
The National Development Reform Commission, China’s top economic planning body, said the earthquake had damaged 391 dams. It said two of the dams were large ones, 28 were medium-sized and the rest were small ones.
The official Xinhua News Agency said 2,000 troops were sent to work on the Zipingpu dam, which lies on about 6 miles up the Min river from the badly damaged city of Dujiangyan in Sichuan province.
Xinhua quoted the Ministry of Water Resources Wednesday as urging protection of the Zipingpu reservoir, saying Dujiangyan would be “swamped” if major problems emerged at the dam.
Via : Yahoo News