Just Eats Won’t Shoot Won’t Breed: Pandas Living In The Lap Of Luxury ‘Too Lazy’ For Sex

Too lazy for sex? You might be a giant panda in a cushy nature preserve.

Researchers are raising concerns that when wild pandas live the high life in manmade landscapes, they get too comfortable to bother mating.


No sex, of course, means no offspring, putting the species at risk. The World Wildlife Fund considers the giant panda a “vulnerable” species and says fewer than 1,900 of them remain in the wild.

Research led by Michigan State University scientists found that a panda’s habitat is ideal when it is happy enough to thrive but not so comfortable that it won’t move around or try to reproduce.

The study published in the journal Conservation Biology concluded that creating the “perfect’” habitat may actually be counterproductive because pandas are discouraged from breeding.

The idea of creating ideal habitats in the wild is one result of climate change and human activity damaging and sometimes destroying the pandas’ natural habitats.

A panda walks through a snowy forest in the Wolong Nature Reserve, China. (Jindong Zhang, MSU/Zenger)

Michigan State researcher Thomas Connor said it’s clear that “maximizing the amount of habitat in a landscape can be bad for connectivity and that the research ”suggests a message of hope.”

“We can effectively manage panda populations by conserving and restoring habitat to intermediate levels. In other words, we don’t have to create perfect habitat to keep protecting pandas,” he said.

Pandas are famously picky about their habitats, said Connor, partly because they need bamboo to survive. Their natural shyness also drives them away from places where humans might disturb them, and they tend to like cooler temperatures and shallow slopes.

Whether making their way in China’s snow or enjoying the sunshine, pandas’ enjoyment of their natural habitat has researchers concerned about their dwindling “dating” habits. (Jindong Zhang, MSU/Zenger)

Study co-author Jack Liu said their findings aren’t bad news: “This work provides hope to balance needs for ecological sustainability and human well-being.”

“Our results show it is possible for both pandas and humans to thrive across coupled human and natural systems,” Liu said.

And Connor said he believes a new understanding of what makes for the best panda habitat could be more relevant to other species that are less finicky about where they live and breed.

Edited by Richard Pretorius and Kristen Butler



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