Giraffes at the Safari Park
April 30, 2019

NEWS RELEASE

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
April 30, 2019

CONTACT:  
San Diego Zoo Global

Public Relations
619-685-3291

WEBSITE:
S
anDiegoZoo.org

 

NEWS RELEASE

San Diego Zoo’s Giant Panda Friendship Wall Removed as Month-long Farewell Celebration Comes to an End

 

Early this morning (April 30, 2019), the San Diego Zoo’s popular red and gold Giant Panda Friendship Wall was dismantled, marking the end of a month-long farewell celebration for the pandas. The wall provided guests an opportunity to symbolically say goodbye, hanging personal messages and commemorative bells, while celebrating the successful completion of significant conservation work during the Zoo’s 23-year panda conservation loan agreement with the People’s Republic of China.

The Giant Panda Friendship Wall, located across from the entrance to the Zoo’s Giant Panda Research Station, was removed one day after the panda habitat closed permanently to the general public—providing more time for animal care staff to continue their task of preparing 27-year-old female giant panda Bai Yun (pronounced bye yoon) and her son, 6-year-old Xiao Liwu (pronounced sshyaoww lee woo), for their trip to China later this spring. Zoo officials said they will now store the wall and its thousands of bells and tags from well-wishers, with the hope of erecting the structure again if pandas return to the San Diego Zoo.

“Although we are sad to see Bai Yun and Xiao Liwu go, we have great hopes for the future,” said Dwight Scott, director of the San Diego Zoo. “We will continue to work with our partners in China for the next stage of our panda program.”

Decades ago, when San Diego Zoo Global started working with giant pandas, the species was on the verge of extinction. The Zoo became part of an international collaboration that included the China Wildlife Conservation Association (CWCA), the China Conservation and Research Center for the Giant Panda (CCRCGP), the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, and other accredited zoos and conservation organizations, in an unprecedented international effort to prevent a panda extinction event. 

Since then, conservation scientists around the world, including scientists from San Diego Zoo Global, have helped the Chinese people raise awareness for the plight of pandas in their native habitat. Bai Yun, Gao Gao (who returned to China in October 2018) and Bai Yun’s cubs—including her sixth cub Xiao Liwu—helped scientists learn a great deal about panda behavior, pregnancy, births, and maternal and geriatric care. This knowledge has contributed to Chinese efforts to help boost the wild population of giant pandas in China to nearly 2,000 individuals.

Building a sustainable population of giant pandas under human care has contributed to the growing population, and has provided pandas for reintroduction into protected areas in China. Their increased numbers, along with policies put in place by the Chinese government, led the International Union for Conservation of Nature’s Red List of Threatened Species to “downlist” the giant panda’s status from Endangered to Vulnerable—meaning that while threats to pandas’ survival remain high, indicators show the species is in less danger of extinction than before, and that conservation efforts are working. In the wake of this accomplishment, conservationists are determined to create a plan to continue the conservation momentum, and the return of Bai Yun and Xiao Liwu to China is a part of that overall strategy.

Zoo guests and panda fans all over the globe are invited to continue sharing their memories of pandas and their hopes for the species on their social media channels—using #pandas4ever.

The San Diego Zoo is globally recognized and a San Diego icon, hosting more than 4 million guests each year. At the San Diego Zoo, visitors can watch penguins and sharks swim, observe the behavior of century-old Galápagos tortoises, enjoy the beauty of exotic orchids, marvel at the playful nature of giant pandas, explore walk-through aviaries filled with the songs and colors of rare birds, and appreciate the power of leopards and jaguars. The San Diego Zoo is also accredited by the American Association of Museums as a Botanical Garden. As visitors discover the rare and endangered species at the San Diego Zoo, they are directly contributing, through admission and on-grounds sales, to the efforts of San Diego Zoo Global, an international nonprofit conservation organization that works to fight extinction through recovery efforts for plants and animals worldwide. To learn more, visit sandiegozoo.org, or connect with us on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram or YouTube.

 

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All visual assets provided by SDZWA are intended solely for use by journalistic news media agencies only. For commercial usage, please submit a request to SDZWA's Licensing Department.

Link includes:

  • B-roll of San Diego Zoo officials dismantling and packing up the pieces of the Giant Panda Friendship Wall.
  • Photos of San Diego Zoo officials dismantling and packing up the pieces of the Giant Panda Friendship Wall.
  • Link also includes:
    • B-roll of the giant panda celebration event—including remarks from Douglas G. Myers, president/CEO, San Diego Zoo Global; and Consul General Zhang Ping of the People’s Republic of China in Los Angeles. Also, officials from San Diego Zoo Global and Chinese dignitaries placed commemorative bells on the Giant Panda Friendship Wall
    • Archival B-roll of Bai Yun—including her arriving at San Diego International Airport, in her habitat, and at her birthday celebrations.
    • Archival B-roll of Bai Yun with her first cub Hua Mei, and her sixth cub Xiao Liwu
    • Archival B-roll of Xiao Liwu—including his birth, his naming ceremony, playing with mom Bai Yun, interacting with keepers and his birthday celebrations
    • Archival images of Bai Yun—including her in her habitat, with cubs, interacting with keepers and at her birthday celebrations
    • Archival images of Xiao Liwu—including him as a cub with mom Bai Yun, interacting with his keepers, in his habitat and at his birthday celebrations
  • All images include embedded captions and permitted use language. Credit: San Diego Zoo Global