In Topkeybara, Red Pandas, only about 2,500 adults left in the wild, are finding a safe habitat to remain alive and furring
Pandas & Leos
- Red pandas and snow leopards are critical indicators of the health of the Himalayan ecosystem
- Both are solitary animals. Red pandas are active at dawn, dusk, and at night. They live at altitudes between 4,900 and 16,500 feet
- They are sometimes called lesser panda
- Western researchers found red pandas much before the giant panda in 1869
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The cool downdraft from the Kanchenjunga blended with the warm sun on
a crispy summer morning at the outdoorsy Topkeydara where the insolent
Shifu unwinds on a tree-top perch after his bamboo breakfast. The
five-year-old male red panda avoids the foot-long lenses of ‘Instagram
upvote hunters’ pointing towards him from 25-foot below. He cannot be
click-captured today. The seek-out for Master Shifu, whose animated
adaptation endeared movie-goers around the world in the Kung Fu Panda franchise, is threatening to end before it fully unfurled. He is doing the mushi-finger skadoosh on his biped fans.
Topkeydara in Senchal wildlife sanctuary is a 90-minute drive from
Darjeeling town with a 5km dirt track detour off the 3 Milestone along
the Ghoom-Jorebungalow Teesta Bazaar road. It is here that the Padmaja
Naidu Himalayan Zoological Park (PNHZP) has set up the country’s lone
conservation breeding centre for red pandas and snow leopards—two shy
animals found in the eastern Himalayas, where swirling mists play
hide-and-seek with the sun and the wind-swept conifers, oak groves and
bamboo forests provide an ideal habitat to these fur balls.
The hillside at the sprawling five-acre enclosure is crimson, flush with rhododendrons—lali-gurash—and
it is here that the handsome red pandas with their ruddy furry coats
and bandit-mask bright eyes seamlessly melt into the burst of red
flowers, moss and lichen. Of the 21 in ‘captivity’ in this region, seven
red pandas are in Topkeydara and the rest in Darjeeling zoo. Other than
Shifu, the conservation centre has five-year-old Kichi—from Mowgli’s
red panda friend in The Jungle Book—and her three cubs…Noel,
Joel and the yet-to-be-named sibling. The mom feasts on tender bamboo
leaves as her young hover around and make soft squealing noises—called a
huff-quack. They are perched high on oak trees, eyeing the humans below
with guarded suspicion.
“Red panda’s favourite food is bamboo (perhaps the sole weakness it
shares with the giant panda). Though the red panda is omnivorous and
will eat an occasional fruit or leaf or even an insect or egg, bamboo
makes up around 95 per cent of its diet,” says Pranita Gupta, a young
education assistant at the PNHZP, who has been studying this adorable
animal for more than five years at the park. But bamboo is a perplexing
evolutionary choice for the red pandas. “A panda’s digestive system
doesn’t have the required microbes to help properly absorb plant
nutrients and to compound matters, bamboo contains little nutritional
value…Red pandas digest less than a quarter of the food and so they are
fed twice a day—morning and evening. To supplement their diet, they are
given milk mixed with raw eggs and honey, besides fruits such as apples
and bananas in the morning.”
The low-nutrient diet forces them to sleep a lot and conserve energy.
Hence, they are solitary creatures. But these furry mammals’ preference
for an arboreal lifestyle has put them in a vulnerable position. “The
biggest danger in the wild is man…expanding human population,
deforestation, habitat loss, and disease, contracted primarily from
domestic dogs. All these and hunting and poaching,” says PNHZP director
Rajendra Jhakar. It is not a surprise that there aren’t more than 2,500
adults (estimated) left in the wild. Besides, it is hard to maintain a
census because of their secretive nature.
In the early 1990s, in response to international conservation
efforts, the park joined the ‘global captive breeding master plan’—a
population management programme for the recovery and long-term survival
of captive and wild red pandas. “Four young pandas were brought to
kickstart the venture,” says Jhakar. The project was expanded in 2016
with new facilities at Topkeydara.
At present, the park has one of the oldest living captive pandas in
the world. Pokhraj: 17 years and nine months. Over the past decade, the
programme has recorded 41 births—21 females and 20 males—including five
at Topkeydara.
Photograph by Sandipan Chatterjee
Biology student Gupta, along with colleagues Nandini Chettri and
Purna Ghisingh, the gamekeeper at the PNHZP, recognises that her work is
important for the protection and survival of the species in the wild.
The aim of the conservation/breeding project is to maintain and restore
lost population and have a higher genetic diversity so that the
captive-bred red pandas have a chance to survive in the wild, says
Gupta. Of the seven in the park, the authorities plan to release four
in the wild by this autumn. The authorities had introduced two females
in the wild in 2003. Of them, Sweetie gave birth to a cub in July 2004
in the hollow of an oak tree.
The animals are tagged and fitted with radio collars and micro-chips
detailing the name and sex of the animal. “With fragmented forests,
patches of agricultural land in between, there’s no way for the pandas
to migrate to greener bamboo pastures or find new partners. That leads
to inbreeding and disease and decline of the species,” says Jhakar. “So
it is essential that genetic diversity is maintained.”
The red panda, or Ailurus fulgens—the fire-coloured cat or
the firefox—looks for company when it’s time to mate. The reclusive and
temperamental animals need a break from each other, even when kept in
confinement. The park officials provide separate sleeping areas to let
the pandas enjoy some “me-time” alone. “The cuddly animals are loners,
and for the most part, silent. Once the male panda mates, he loses
interest in the female and moves away,” says Gupta. She’s also found
individuals that are un-panda-like gregarious. “Kichi is instinctively
possessive of her young ones. If threatened, she will constantly move
the cubs from one tree hollow to another.”
In Topkeydara, the elusive furballs are finding a habitat—be it
human-intervened—to get on with what Oogway would have said: “One often
meets his destiny on the road he takes to avoid it.” They are safe in a
place that offers spectacular views of the Singalila ridge—range to
range, all the way to Mount Kanchenjunga, the guardian deity.
By Probir Pramanik in Darjeeling
https://www.outlookindia.com/
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