Here it is, simply called Panda. The western world first saw a live giant panda only half a century ago. And 50 years from now, this idolized animal could be extinct. If this happens, it's we humans who'll be largely to blame. The story of how the worldwide love of the panda began is hopelessly romantic. It involves war, smuggling, and high society. But the panda's story is also tragic. It's an animal which has evolved into a peculiar and precarious existence, unable to cope with interference. The plight of the panda has become a symbol for the thousands of species which are under daily threat from human activities. If we can save the panda, then perhaps we can create enough awareness of our delicate environment to protect the less attractive animals and plants, which will otherwise disappear very soon. Which means the story of the panda is also one about the struggle of scientists to understand an animal which is so secretive in its natural habitat that we know little of its behavior in the wild. It's as if we've always known the panda. Yet, it could disappear in our children's lifetimes. Why do we have such an attachment to an animal which we've only been able to see alive for part of this century, for only three generations? It's as if we've always known the panda. Yet, it could disappear in our children's lifetimes. Why do we have such an attachment to an animal which we've only been able to see alive for part of this century, for only three generations? Well, perhaps it has something to do with the fact that the giant panda is a set of contradictions. It's strong, yet exquisitely vulnerable. Vulnerable to interference with its surroundings, vulnerable to extinction, and vulnerable in the way you just want to reach out and cuddle one. It's almost replaced the teddy bear in affection. President Teddy Roosevelt was a great hunter, but on one trip he couldn't bring himself to shoot a baby bear. The cartoonists of the day had a lot of fun and created the symbol of the teddy bear, later to be exploited by a soft toy company. How teddy bears, or Teddy Roosevelt, are connected with the giant panda, you'll discover later. But certainly the black and white bear is a serious competitor for children's love. There's an ancient Chinese story of how the panda's markings came about. In this remote and inhospitable wilderness, a young shepherdess, friend to all the pandas, died whilst trying to save a baby panda from the teeth and claws of a leopard. The pandas who loved her were so moved by her courage that they arranged a very special funeral ceremony. All the pandas wept at the loss of their beloved shepherdess, and their tears stained their eyes and bodies black. The shepherdess was transformed into a mountain, which today stands like a monument where the giant pandas roam in the wild. And that's how the giant panda came to look so sad. Here are two ordinary bank passbooks. On the left, your average ordinary bank passbook, which pays three and three quarter percent interest. On the right, the ANZ high performance passbook, which pays nine percent interest. That's over twice as much. The ANZ high performance passbook. Next to it, the other books are a joke. If you buy a roll of Fujifilm at most stockists, you could win a trip for $2.2 Expo 88. If not, you could win a cooler bag, a quick-snap camera, a calculator, or at the very least, a dollar off the processing. Fuji scratch and win. You can't lose. The Eon FM Breakfast Show. Everybody's talking about it. Janet's obsession is getting out of hand. Janet, this is taking over your whole life. It's very easy for you. You've got no idea. You think you know it all, but you don't know it all. Finally gets Jill alone. Is Dad not home yet? Oh no, actually Dad's not coming home. He got held up at work. Oh, I think you're fantastic. How will Jill react? Richmond Hill, Wednesday at 7.30. Even in the 1920s, virtually only Chinese people had seen the animal in the wild. So the ambition of many rich white adventurers was to find and shoot a giant panda for one of their museums back home. And their starting point was Shanghai. Shanghai in the 1920s was called the Paris of the East. In about 100 years, the city had grown from a village to one of the largest collections of humanity in the world at that time. The British and French used Shanghai as if it were their own. Because of the arrangement they had with the Chinese, they didn't have to obey local laws. Each nation had its own tradition of celebrating the day of the day. Each nation had its own police force and legal system. There were few tariffs on imports or exports, and a passport was often just a formality which could be ignored by corrupt officials for a price. In such a place, espionage, crime, political intrigue and fabulous profits from coolie labor were commonplace. And, needless to say, men and women who'd been misfits or an embarrassment at home found new identities in this peculiar and frantic corner of China, where opium was almost as easy to obtain as a cigarette. So Shanghai was the obvious place for the giant panda hunters to obtain their supplies and porters, and set off on their long and extremely dangerous expeditions. But how did they come to know about this unusual beast? To find that out, we have to go first to an animal with a similar name, but a fairly different appearance. Europeans discovered the lesser, or red panda, about 160 years ago, about half a century before the West knew there was such a thing as a giant panda. The word panda, by the way, comes from Nepal, on the other side of the Himalayas from the giant panda's Tibetan and Chinese home. The habitats of both pandas overlapped, which, as we'll discover later, could explain why the animals seem so alike, yet may not be related at all. A red panda actually came to London Zoo in 1869, only to survive a few months. Naturalists thought that the red panda came from the raccoon family, and there were learned discussions about it. Parts of the panda's behavior and appearance were like a raccoon, but others like a bear. Yet cute though the red panda, or cat bear, as some used to call it, cute though it was, we human animals didn't fall in love with it the way we did with the giant variety. The reasons were probably to do with the lack of media in the 19th century and the less imposing stature of the red panda. It's ironic that just as the first red panda in captivity died, a French priest unknowingly was preparing the giant panda for the limelight. Given the popularity of the giant panda nowadays, it's surprising to find that the animal was new to the West in 1870, and not many Chinese were aware of it either. Abbot Armand David was a Lazarus missionary from France. He had such an impressive knowledge of the animal and plant kingdoms that the Paris Museum of Natural History asked him to collect rare specimens for them whilst the priest was doing his holy work in China. Père David, as he came to be known, was a good naturalist, and in unexplored parts of China and Tibet he found many new species. But what he was famous for in his own lifetime was his description of the Baishong, or white bear. Père David never saw a giant panda alive, but one day in panda country a local hunter showed him a curious skin. The fur was rather coarse and mostly white, apart from curious black patches over the eyes, black ears and black limbs. At first sight it looked like a bear. Analysis of Père David's specimens suggested that the animal was more closely related to the red panda than the bear, and that's how the Baishong became known as the great or giant panda. This was probably an error since the giant panda may indeed be a bear after all. But panda or not, it was clearly a new beast to tempt white hunters, and a species which museums, particularly in the United States, wanted to have on display. So the hunters and explorers continued to come to Shanghai, which by the 30s was a changed city. Centered on Shanghai, China was in turmoil. The city was the birthplace of Chinese communism and thus the focus of the revolutionaries violent opposition. Some of the worst massacres of communists took place in Shanghai. In this embattled city, Chiang Kai-shek's nationalists were fighting the Reds, and both were fighting the invading Japanese. But remarkable though it seems, the foreign sectors of Shanghai were left alone by and large. Amidst the carnage, the British, French and American inhabitants pretended everything was normal. Therefore, China's agony made little difference to the invading panda adventurers. It was just a minor inconvenience compared to the challenge of bagging a giant panda. In Shanghai, the adventurers found coolies, guides, food, weapons and other necessities. Some of the tribal territories the foreigners passed through were not only hostile as far as the environment was concerned, but dangerous because of potential attack by the aboriginal people and bandits. This is rare archival film of some of the inhabitants who lived near the territory of the giant panda. This particular expedition developed good relations with the locals and were allowed to observe their many rituals. It was thousands of miles from the coast to panda country near the Tibetan border in Sichuan province. They had to travel up China's great rivers such as the Yangtze. This required permission from the authorities, which was often not even requested by the hunters. The boat journey took them through some of the unhealthiest regions of the world. China was known at that time as the sick man of Asia, with diseases like bubonic plague being quite common. If the foreigners survived that, then eventually they had to set off on foot for the more remote areas. And conditions became even worse if that was possible after the explorers reached the mountains where the panda lived. It was and is very difficult to find a giant panda in the wild, even for local hunters. The animals live at an altitude of more than 2000 meters in almost impenetrable bamboo forests, above which is the equally inhospitable Rhododendron jungle. Pandas also spend most of their lives alone, so they are scattered thinly. But for those who wish to become one of the few white men to shoot a giant panda, these sorts of challenges only increased the attraction, and some came back with a trophy. The first recorded whites to shoot a giant panda were the sons of former president Teddy Roosevelt. So the sons of the father of the teddy bear gained maximum publicity for the animal which would later usurp the soft toy industry. But naturalists were frustrated with only skin and bones to examine. They wanted a living panda. Why do I prefer mum roll onto a spray deodorant? Well, working close to people in an office all day, you need a good antiperspirant. I prefer mum because it gives me extra protection where I need it, without those awful fumes. It's got a lovely fragrance that lasts, especially when it's hard to stay cool. I like dictation with Mr. Smithers. We wish to advise that you don't have to go ahead. Oh, you're talking too fast. I really can't get by without my mum. Shall we try again? I broke my pencil. Get yourself in at Just Genes. Okie Herringbone pleated retros will get you in. Okie textured striped drills, you're in. Oh, you've got to be in. In Okie pleated casuals and definitely in in Britannia pleats. Get into Just Genes with Just You, Just Me, Just You. Wow. Where's Max? He's on my cam. I'm on my six pack too with thousands of prizes. The eyes of the world are on Australia for the opening of the biggest international event ever staged in the Southern Hemisphere. World Expo 88, a once in a lifetime experience that will stand as testament to man's achievements. Hosted by Kerry Ann Kenley and Tim Webster and proudly brought to you by Coon, YoPlay and Cadbury, World Expo 88, the opening celebrations commence Saturday morning live and exclusive to Ted. It capturing a panda and bringing it thousands of miles back to Europe or the United States was a task which had been beyond some of the most fearless explorers of the day. But the person who was the first to bring out a live panda wasn't a big game hunter, wasn't an explorer, wasn't a man. She was a New York fashion designer. In December 1936, Ruth Harkness disembarked at San Francisco with the world's first captive panda, baby Sue Lynn. Both Ms. Harkness and her panda cup made international headlines and a rather mini giant panda brought the species to public awareness and admiration. But even after all these years, the story of how Ruth Harkness caught Sue Lynn is still unclear. Ruth Harkness' husband had died in Shanghai after failing to find a panda. Ruth, on hearing of his death, said she not so much lost a husband but gained an expedition. She hired a local guide and went off into one of the coldest, most bandit ridden parts of the country. She was to have an arduous and dangerous journey up to near the Tibetan border and returned some time later with a baby panda. The Chinese authorities were upset that Ruth hadn't asked for permission to go into such dangerous country and in the end the animal was smuggled out to America as a dog worth $20. Ruth Harkness gave the story that they'd found the little one in the bamboo forest. But there were allegations that she'd poached the panda from another hunter. Nonetheless, America went wild at the arrival of the first giant panda. Everyone was intensely fascinated by Sue Lynn and she eventually arrived at Brookfield Zoo Chicago, which financed Ruth Harkness to return to China for a second panda, Mei Mei. The zoo's turnstile overheated with the attraction of two giant pandas. But the partnership was not to last. Sue Lynn died when a piece of wood lodged in her throat. She ended up stuffed in the Field Museum of Natural History in Chicago, but not before they discovered that cute little Sue Lynn had been a he all along. And so before the war, the world became fascinated with the giant panda through what was nothing short of kidnap. The sad sequel is that after all this, Ruth Harkness couldn't keep herself in the limelight. And a decade later, she died an alcoholic alone in a hotel room. In the 50 years or so since Sue Lynn got off the boat in San Francisco, the attention over the plight of the giant panda has shifted to China. Zoos, of course, love having a panda, because not only does such a rare animal bring prestige, but vast crowds of paying visitors. But in that same 50 years, it's also become clear that the giant panda is under extreme threat of extinction. No one's quite sure how many of these animals are left in the wild. The most optimistic estimates are around a thousand individuals. The most pessimistic, less than 600. So the 12 panda reserves in China and those zoos lucky enough to have pandas have the enormous responsibility of trying to conserve this beautiful species. And in order to do this, scientists need to know a lot about what the panda is, how it behaves, and how its body works. Yet although we've had all this time, we still know very little about the giant panda. We know it spends most of its time eating bamboo. We know the giant panda is a mammal. It's warm-blooded and suckled its young. It's also a carnivore. Bamboo is not the giant panda's only food. It can eat meat. But from here, the description of the giant panda becomes confusing because scientists disagree as to which family it belongs. The raccoons, the bears, or in a panda group with just two members. Part of the confusion comes from the colloquial name for the animal, namely panda. By calling it a giant panda, scientists have occasionally assumed a relationship with the lesser or red panda, which probably doesn't exist. It's tempting to say that animals are of the same family just because they have superficial similarities. For instance, the red panda looks like a raccoon and behaves somewhat like one. The giant panda, whilst having some unique features in common with the red panda, looks and behaves more like a bear. The problem for those who classify species is that the environment can make animals look alike. Because species have to evolve to survive in the same surroundings, they often share the same features without necessarily being related. For instance, the Tasmanian tiger, now extinct, or phylociene as it's called technically, had an appearance similar to a dog or wolf, but it was much more closely related to the kangaroo than its lookalikes in Europe. The phylociene looked like a wolf because it also had to run long distances and hunt, and a wolf-type body is a most efficient design for these activities, whether they be in Australia or Transylvania. Almost certainly the giant panda belongs to the bear family and isn't related to the red panda at all. But that's really only of academic interest, because above all the science we need to know concerns why the giant panda is under threat, since under threat it certainly is. Living at such altitudes and dense forests of bamboo, the giant panda doesn't have many mates and so has adapted to a leisurely life of munching stocks 12 hours a day. It may be leisurely, but it's rather precarious and inefficient. The panda has huge muscles attached to its skull, plus specially evolved teeth to deal with all this chewing. But its digestive system, its stomach and intestines, has not adapted well, so the panda passes large and frequent motions because it only absorbs a small amount of bamboo, hence the constant feeding. But the way the panda feeds is one of its most endearing features. It has almost a human posture as it sits and uses its paw to bring the stocks to its mouth. And to do this requires a very special grasp, permitted by the panda's unique thumb. The famous panda thumb is not a sixth finger, but the enlargement of a bone in the wrist, which moves in a similar fashion to the human thumb. Eight thirty tonight, the deputy D.A. gets a death threat. Grace, let me ask you something. You got a gun? No. Do yourself a favor. She goes for the toughest penalty. Sentence, this man to death. LA Law, eight thirty tonight on ten. Now for the first time you can experience the feeling of fresh natural mineral spas with new Norsca Spa. Rich foam shampoo, silky soap, fresh antiperspirants, enriched with essential minerals and the clean crisp fragrance of juniper. New Norsca Spa refreshes you, body and soul. If your diet or vitamin intake is inadequate and you've been pushing things a little, a glass of effervescent Barocca will help you go on bouncing through the day. When you've been asking a little too much of your body, Barocca may help put back what a hectic lifestyle takes away. Get yourself in at Just Genes. Okie herringbone pleated retros will get you in. Okie textured stripe drills, you're in. You've got to be in in Okie pleated casuals and definitely in in Britannia pleats. Get into Just Genes with Just You, Just Me, Just You. You know the best ideas and slice bread? This new Palsonic Auto Bakery. Just add the premixed yeast and flour, some water, set the timer, the Palsonic Auto Bakery does the rest. Here I go Dad. Automatically. Needs the dough, lets it rise and bakes to a golden crust. Now my family wakes up to hot fresh bread every day. New Palsonic Auto Bakery leaves me free to earn a crust. Has existed for at least three million years. Panda fossils have been found across all this area of China. But today this huge territory has shrunk to a few small regions in western China which are reducing still further. The problem is that humans in China vastly outnumber pandas and humans are being moved into the giant pandas habitat swelling the numbers of people of Tibetan stock who already live there. And all these families need homes and food. The need for agricultural land and wood has been so great that the pandas bamboo forests have been and are being destroyed. The pandas precious bamboo can't grow unless there's adequate tree cover above it. Pandas are also very shy and retreat from human settlements even if there is food around. So the pressures of logging and farming mean that the areas which are available to pandas are becoming much smaller and more isolated. Less forest implies less food for fewer and fewer pandas. And isolated areas of bamboo forest mean that the pandas have nowhere else to go if there's a local catastrophe. Because if something happens to the pandas cherished bamboo then a catastrophe is very likely which is just what happened in the mid 70s and again in 1983 when the bamboo flowered and died off. This is a normal phenomenon and occurs every few decades but is a disaster when the pandas numbers are so low. The Chinese government has created 12 panda reserves the largest of which is this one at Wulong. These panda reserves are an attempt to set up an effective conservation program for giant pandas and their habitat. Wulong is both a facility for captive pandas and a center for field research. For instance there's an American Chinese research project which is trying to discover more about the pandas habits in the wild. They track the panda electronically since it's an incredibly timid and elusive animal. It lives by itself on less mating. And the pandas infant rearing practices are so intensive that it's unlikely a female can raise more than one cub every three years. But even in the reserves logging and farming still threaten the pandas environment. At Wulong 3,000 people compete with only 100 pandas. Wulong is jointly funded by the Chinese government and the World Wildlife Fund. It's basically a breeding facility where captured pandas are lovingly cared for and monitored. The scientists and keepers need to know as much as possible about their charges so that they can keep them in the best of health and also so they can recognize the moment a female giant panda is in heat and ready to mate. This so-called estrus can last only a day or two which means the keepers have to move quickly and bring a breeding pair together who are otherwise kept apart. Some of the pandas like this one with a neck scar were brought here because of injuries due to another threat to their survival. Pandas often become caught in illegal traps designed for prized musk deer. The laboratories at Wulong support a comprehensive range of research projects. Some of the scientists are investigating the hormones and chemical changes which are involved in pandas sexual and mating cycle. This might help the researchers to predict when the animals are ready to get together or assist the pandas in having a successful pregnancy. The workers at Wulong also have an interest in artificial insemination. Other investigations are into the problems of bamboo die-off after its periodic flowering. They're trying to see whether the pandas will eat other varieties. If the pandas do like the bamboo, it will be planted in the area. So the situation is dire. In the animals present living areas, even including the reserves, only a small fraction of the territory can be called suitable for survival. If you add to that the problem that pandas won't live near human settlement, then it's easy to understand the awful plight of this beautiful species. And the way the pandas are split up doesn't help their prospects for survival. Pandas seem to be living in 35 separate groups of around 20 each. Now it doesn't take much to knock off a population of 20. A few accidental trappings, a reduction of food supply, or a sterile male are all potential and imaginable disasters. On top of that, one of the keys to survival is reckoned to be what's termed genetic diversity. Genetic diversity means that you don't have closely related animals breeding together. One of the risks of inbreeding is that a group of animals can inherit the same susceptibility to infections, for example, and thus a simple virus could wipe out the whole population in a very short time. And some experts reckon that the giant panda is already dangerously inbred. For instance, all the recent litters in captivity in China stem from only three males and ten females. The duty of zoos is to breed the panda rather than just show it off, but they have enormous difficulties to overcome, not the least being the terrible death rate amongst infant pandas. Of 51 captive births in 20 years in China, only 19 survived more than two months. And if all this wasn't enough, recent Chinese research suggests that pandas may have a sperm defect which hampers fertility. Tennis can get pretty heated, but to be successful in this game you have to have complete confidence in yourself. That's why I need this. Rexona Sport. It helps me stop sweating. And it's anti-stain too. New Rexona Sport deodorant. I think it's more effective than ever. New super effective Rexona Sport. Won't let you down. Gotta get away, gotta get away, gotta get away. Get away on a golden holiday. You can be pampered. Be adventurous. Be relaxed. Be different. Be on your way to a golden holiday. Gotta get away on a golden holiday. See your travel agent or contact Malaysia Airlines. I'd like to thank you on Mother's Day for all the things you've done. You're always there to help me through. To me you're number one. Oh I really love you, Mum. For Mother's Day, there's no other store like David Jones. The experience of the National Zoo in Washington, DC is an example of how difficult it is to breed giant pandas. We've managed to obtain rare footage of the zoo's attempts with their parents, Ling Ling and Jing Jing. The Chinese gave Ling Ling and Jing Jing to the United States after the visit of Richard Nixon to China in 1972. One of the great challenges in panda breeding is sex education. It's hard to teach a panda what he or she should do by instinct. Captivity can affect whether pandas are attracted to each other. Sometimes the pandas fancy their keepers more, which isn't surprising. Pandas see more of humans in a zoo than they do of each other. And for all we know, that's what captive pandas think pandas look like. And when the time comes, the males aren't sure what to do. Of course, Ling Ling finds it extremely irritating that the only male panda from miles around is totally inept. The keepers first have to recognize when the female is in season and ready to mate. This allows them to bring the pandas together, since otherwise the animals are kept apart for most of the time. As with humans, female pandas reach sexual maturity before males. Ling Ling didn't reach her prime till she was over six. The typical female only has eggs ready for fertilization and thus comes into heat once, or less commonly, twice per year, in spring and maybe autumn. When in heat, the animal loses her appetite, makes more noise, becomes restless, marks certain spots with scent, and when ready will lift her tail for the male, even if he hasn't much of a clue about the whole thing. In the national zoo, Ling Ling would take frequent baths and even cover herself in soil, perhaps to acquire some local scent. Another curious sign in female pandas of being ready to mate is walking backwards whilst making bleating noises. All these signals tell the male that the time when the female will receive him is imminent. This preparatory period gives the best chance of something actually happening, because the female is only receptive to the male for a very few days, perhaps only once per year, and in the wild that may only be once every two or three years. In Washington, the female panda Ling Ling is often boss. Ling Ling makes sure she's in charge and fends off Jing Jing when she's not prepared to mate. But sometimes when she shows Jing Jing that she is ready, he's not sure what to do. In fact, he's a bit pathetic, and it took Jing Jing a few seasons to learn the facts of life. Foreplay, at times, was tantalizing, to say the least. But the attempts by Washington Zoo to get the pair to mate didn't work out, so the zoo decided to try artificial insemination. In 1980, a team of 13, which included a doctor from the local children's hospital, anesthetized the male panda Jing Jing to obtain some semen. The technique used by the zoo to collect semen from Jing Jing is called electro-ejaculation. As you might imagine, it's an awkward process, and in the end the animal's sperm count was too low to be of use. So they had to go to the freezer and thaw out semen the zoo had gathered the year before. And once back in liquid form, the semen was drawn up and introduced into a now anesthetized Ling Ling. But all this effort came to nothing, and the zoo had to wait till 1983, when the animals mated properly and Ling Ling became pregnant. Five months later, Ling Ling began preparing for the delivery. No outside visitors were allowed, and this extraordinary film is the main record of what happened. Here, Ling Ling is clearly in labor. She's quite close to having the baby by this stage. The infant panda is a tiny naked cub, a thousandth the size of its mother. Now the question for the zoo officials was whether or not the cub had been born alive. A few tense moments pass, and yes, the new panda's breathing. In a very similar posture to humans, the mother takes her child to the breast and cuddles it closely. But the joy of the birth was not to last. The cub, which was a male, had contracted a chest infection from the womb and died three hours later. Now pay attention, Smythe, write down these notes. A fresh breath, that's close up. A white teeth, red close up. When you're close up, that's when close up comes. White teeth and a fresh mouth. To write protection and a mouthwash too. Do it for me and I'll do it for you. Get close up. Every day in a million ways, every homely topic. To keep your loo clean, fresh and blue. Every homely topic. New Ricoh compacts for $169 at leading photographic stores everywhere. Ricoh, technology that clicks. Ling Ling spent some days afterwards cradling apples or other objects in the place of her cub. The following year there was also a successful meeting, but this time the cub was still born, an infection again. But there have been successes elsewhere. Sad though the Washington experience is, other zoos have managed to breed giant pandas. And the rates everywhere should improve with further experience. The panda is a symbol of threatened extinction. It's a cuddly animal which has become the representative for all the thousands upon thousands of creatures and plants which will cease to exist in a few years unless we care more for our surroundings. The awful truth about the world's environment is that we're now in a period when species are becoming extinct at a rate unequaled since the dinosaurs died out. But today this loss of species is mostly a man-made tragedy as opposed to a natural one.