VERY INTERESTING NUMBER 80: PANDAS

 Hello ladies and gents this is the Viking telling you that today we are talking about

PANDAS

Giant panda eating Bamboo

1. THEY HAVE GREAT CAMOUFLAGE FOR THEIR ENVIRONMENT

The giant panda's distinct black-and-white markings have two functions: camouflage and communication.  Most of the panda - its face, neck, belly, rump - is white to help it hide in snowy habitats. The arms and legs are black, helping it to hide in shade. 

2. THEIR EYES ARE DIFFERENT TO NORMAL BEARS

Like domestic cats, giant pandas have vertical slits for pupils.

3. CUBS ARE WELL PROTECTED IN THEIR FIRST MONTH

Mother pandas keep contact with their cub nearly 100% of the time during their first month - with the cub resting on her front and remaining covered by her paw, arm or head. 

4. COURAGEOUS CUBS!

At 5 months old, giant pandas learn how to climb - sometimes practicing by climbing on their mum. 

5. A HELPING HAND

They have an extended wrist bone that they use like a thumb to help them grip food.

6. THEY SPEND A LOT OF THEIR DAY EATING

Giant pandas spend 10-16 hours a day feeding, mainly on bamboo.   

7. BAMBOO IS CRITICAL TO THEIR DIET

Pandas need at least 2 different bamboo species in their range to avoid starvation

8. BUT THEY DO OCCASIONALLY EAT SOMETHING OTHER THAN BAMBOO

Although pandas are 99% vegetarian their digestive system is typical of a carnivore. For the 1% of their diet that isn't bamboo, pandas eat eggs, small animals, carrion, and forage in farmland for pumpkin, kidney beans, wheat and domestic pig food. 

9. PANDAS SOMETIMES DO HANDSTANDS WHEN THEY WEE!

Sometimes, to mark their scent, panda's climb a tree backwards with their hindfeet until they're in a full handstand upside down - enabling them to leave their scent higher up. 

10. THEY LIKE TO KEEP IT REGULAR

On average, pandas poo 40 times a day.

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