pandas
DESCRIPTION
Pandas . BY TRINITY-BURTON. What they look like . Pandas have black circles around there eyes. They have black ears. They also have five sharp nails and they have a few sharp teeth but they only use those teeth for chewing bamboo. . Location and Habitat . - PowerPoint PPT PresentationTRANSCRIPT
BY TRINITY-BURTON
PANDAS
Pandas have black circles around there eyes. They have black ears. They also have five sharp nails and they have a few sharp teeth but they only use those teeth for chewing
bamboo.
WHAT THEY LOOK LIKE
The panda is native to china but lives in a much smaller region than they on
The panda is native to China but lives in a much smaller region than they once inhabited. They have been pushed
into the mountains of a few scattered in southwestern China. Pandas are only found in the un distributed
mountain forests of some parts of central China. More specifically, their habitat is the bamboo forests.
LOCATION AND HABITAT
Pandas eat bamboo. A pandas daily menu consent's almost entirely of the leaves, stems, and
various bamboo species. A pandas diet is 99% bamboo, 13kg ( 30Ibs) or more a day-that is an estimated 3,500 bamboo stalks a day! Bamboo doesn’t provide much energy, so pandas have to keep eating for 12 hours
straight a day. Pandas are herbivores so they don’t have prey.
WHAT THEY EAT
Pandas are endangered this is why pandas are endangered. People kill pandas for there fur to make rugs and blankets, plus people eat pandas. There are only about 1,000 pandas living in the wild today.
In the mid 1970’s many pandas of starvation because of a widespread of bamboo died back.
ARE THEY ENDANGERED?
1) Pandas have a very good sense of smell even at night. At night pandas can find the best bamboo stalk by scent
2) A pandas teeth are seven times larger than
Human teeth.
3) Pandas have such powerful jaws that they can easily bite through a thick bamboo stalk while humans would have
trouble cutting the same stalk with a ax.
4) A pandas can peel and eat a bamboo shoot in 40 seconds.
FUN FACTS ABOUT PANDAS
National geographic.comwww.npr.org
www.defenders.org
RESOURCES