Giant panda [3], bamboo bear (Ailuropoda melanoleuca) - a species of predatory mammal from the bear family (Ursidae). Giant panda lives in bamboo forests at an altitude of 1200-4100 m above sea level [2] (in winter it goes down to 800 m above sea level). It is undoubtedly a predatory species, but in reality it feeds on plant shoots (mainly bamboo) and does not disdain fish and small rodents. Pandas are classified as predatory animals due to the structure of their digestive system. It is built like that of animals that eat meat. For this reason, the panda has to eat a lot, even up to 40 kg a day. This is due to the fact that the panda digests only 25% of the eaten food (when, for example, cows digest 80% of the consumed food) [4]. It has long been classified in the raccoon family as a distant relative of the little panda, but genetic studies have shown that the giant panda is related to the bears it split off in the early development of the bear family. Its closest relative is the Andean bear. The giant panda is one of the animals at risk of extinction, mainly due to the gradual reduction of the areas available to it, but also
Giant panda [3], bamboo bear (Ailuropoda melanoleuca) - a species of predatory mammal from the bear family (Ursidae). Giant panda lives in bamboo forests at an altitude of 1200-4100 m above sea level [2] (in winter it goes down to 800 m above sea level). It is undoubtedly a predatory species, but in reality it feeds on plant shoots (mainly bamboo) and does not disdain fish and small rodents. Pandas are classified as predatory animals due to the structure of their digestive system. It is built like that of animals that eat meat. For this reason, the panda has to eat a lot, even up to 40 kg a day. This is due to the fact that the panda digests only 25% of the eaten food (when, for example, cows digest 80% of the consumed food) [4]. It has long been classified in the raccoon family as a distant relative of the little panda, but genetic studies have shown that the giant panda is related to the bears it split off in the early development of the bear family. Its closest relative is the Andean bear. The giant panda is one of the animals at risk of extinction, mainly due to the gradual reduction of the areas available to it, but also
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