A giant panda who went astray and was being chased by dogs has been saved and
escorted home by villagers and forestry workers in southwest China's Sichuan
Province, home to most of the endangered animals.
The panda, a five-year-old female, was seen being chased by several barking
dogs on a hill in Yuexi county of the Yi Autonomous Prefecture of Liangshan last
Sunday morning, said Gong Tianjian, head of the Shenguozhuang Nature Reserve for
Giant Pandas.
Gong and his colleagues assumed the panda had lost her way and wandered out
of the reserve.
"Six villagers from Shenpu Village happened to be herding sheep nearby and
immediately drove the dogs away," Gong told Xinhua in an interview Friday. "Two
of them ran down the hill to report to local forestry officials and the other
four stayed behind to keep an eye on the panda and wait for help."
The place is 150 kilometers from the county seat and the rescue team sent by
the county government arrived at 8:30 p.m., he said.
A preliminary checkup showed the giant panda weighed 75 kilos and was more
scared than wounded. She was hospitalized at the rescue center of the nature
reserve for two days and was released to the wild Wednesday afternoon, said Chen
Fulin, an official with the government of Liangshan prefecture.
As Wednesday was the annual "Torch Day" celebrated by the Yi people, some
locals joked the giant panda was there for the holiday too, which is considered
the local version of Valentine's Day.
Shenguozhuang nature reserve, located on the eastern section of the Hengduan
Mountain Range, has an average altitude of 3,000 meters. It is home to giant
pandas, red pandas, black bears and dozens of rare animal species.
In the ethnic Yi dialect, "Shenguozhuang" translates into "ancient expanse of
forest".
The giant panda is one of the world's most endangered species. About 1,590
pandas live in the wild in the mountains of Sichuan and Shaanxi provinces and
another 180 are kept in zoos all over the world.
The giant panda's Sichuan Province habitat is a 9,510 sq km area which
includes the world-renowned Wolong nature reserve. The habitat is home to at
least 300 giant pandas and a variety of endangered flora.
Last week, members of the 30th session of the World Heritage Committee agreed
to put the giant panda habitat on the World Heritage List.