The Smithsonian National Zoo’s New Giant Pandas Will Make Their Public Debut on January 24
A pair of 3-year-old giant pandas—a male named Bao Li and a female called Qing Bao—have officially arrived at the Zoo, where they will first acclimate to their new home
For the first time in more than two decades, the Smithsonian's National Zoo and Conservation Biology Institute is welcoming two new giant pandas to Washington, D.C. The pair just arrived today after a long journey from China.
The black-and-white duo—a male named Bao Li and a female called Qing Bao—landed this morning at Dulles International Airport before being transported by truck to their new home. According to a statement from the zoo, “The animal care team reported that [the pandas] exited their crates and began exploring their new indoor enclosures, in which keepers placed ample bamboo for the bears to eat.”
Staff have been refreshing the giant panda exhibit in anticipation of Bao Li and Qing Bao’s arrival, with upgrades like fresh sod, murals depicting mountains, a panda hammock, black locust climbing structures and 40 Giant Panda Cam cameras, per the Washington Post. Crews also outfitted the space with taller fences, a better air conditioning system and new viewing glass.
Now, the pandas will be quarantined in the panda house for a minimum of 30 days. According to James Steeil, a veterinarian with the Zoo who traveled with the pair from China, the quarantine provides the opportunity to “check them over. Make sure they have no infectious disease, concerns or anything like that. We look at their feces, we look at their nutrition and get them acclimated to us and our routines.”
“During that time, our staff is just beginning, to know them and their personalities, getting them to sort of work with and trust us, and also getting them to learn the exhibit and all the ins and outs,” said Laurie Thompson, an assistant curator for pandas at the Zoo.” Bao Li is the son of Bao Bao, a panda born at the National Zoo in 2013, and Thompson is curious to see if Bao Li is anything like his mother. “I'm most looking forward to definitely just working one-on-one with them getting to learn their personalities,” she said.
The staff already have some idea of what to expect. Steeil also journeyed to China on an initial trip to meet the pandas earlier this year. “Bao Li has a quite a personality. He's very personable. He's very interactive with guests. He likes to roll around. He likes to play and Qing Bao is also equally delightful,” he said. “She's very active and she likes to move around. She really enjoys carrots.”
The public will have their opportunity to see the pandas on January 24, the Zoo announced. The beloved "Panda Cam," which allows fans from around the world to follow the creatures' daily lives, will go back online that same day.
Departing China
China has agreed to loan Bao Li and Qing Bao to the National Zoo for the next decade, in exchange for $1 million per year to help fund animal research and conservation efforts in China.
The 3-year-old giant pandas (Ailuropoda melanoleuca) departed the research center on Monday evening, local time, in Dujiangyan City, Sichuan, in southwest China, reports CNN’s Nectar Gan. Caretakers situated the bears in transport crates, then loaded them onto trucks. The bears were given a warm send-off, with staff members cheering and waving banners as the trucks left the facility.
Bao Li was “calm and composed as he slowly paced around the crate,” writes Gan. Qing Bao, meanwhile, was “more restless.”
“She stood up and stuck her snout and paws out through the bars as her crate was forklifted onto the truck,” Gan writes.
The trucks ferried the animals to a chartered plane stocked with their favorite foods—corn buns, bamboo shoots and carrots—as well as water and medicine for the flight to the American capital. The aircraft, nicknamed the “Panda Express,” is a FedEx Boeing 777 cargo jet.
Mariel Lally, a panda caretaker at the National Zoo, flew to China nearly two weeks ago to get to know Bao Li and Qing Bao and join them on their journey over the Pacific Ocean. Two other panda experts from the National Zoo are also accompanying the bears on the trip.
The bears have been in quarantine since September 13; more recently, they’ve been getting comfortable with their crates.
“They go in there, they get their favorite treats, and it’s actually difficult to get them out of it,” Lally tells CNN. “They’re really comfortable in there, and the crates are humongous. They could lay down in either direction, stand up, do a cartwheel—you name it, there’s so much space.”
Bao Li and Qing Bao are the latest in a long line of animals to be offered up under China’s decades-long tradition of “panda diplomacy.” China gifted the first pandas to the U.S. in 1972 during Richard Nixon’s presidency. For decades, China continued lending giant pandas to zoos around the country, not only as a symbol of friendship between the two nations, but also to help save the slow-to-reproduce creatures from extinction.
Roughly 1,200 pandas lived in the wild in the 1980s. Today, the population has grown to more than 1,800, plus another 600 living in captivity.
The National Zoo bid farewell to its last remaining giant pandas—Mei Xiang, Tian Tian and Xiao Qi Ji—in November 2023. Zoo Atlanta sent back its four giant pandas just this past weekend, on what was likely the first leg of a round-trip journey that includes bringing Bao Li and Qing Bao to Washington, D.C.
But, in February 2024, “panda diplomacy” got a boost when the China Wildlife Conservation Association revealed plans to send two giant pandas to the San Diego Zoo. And, in May, the National Zoo announced that it would soon be welcoming two new giant pandas.
Two bears, Yun Chuan and Xin Bao, arrived in California in late June—the first giant pandas to enter the U.S. in 21 years. Now, Bao Li and Qing Bao are following in their paw-steps.
“There are pandas in other zoos around the world, but they are iconic with the National Zoo,” said Brandie Smith, the Zoo's director, in an interview with Smithsonian magazine in May.. “They have a special meaning here.”