Baby news? Calgary zoo hoping for giant panda pregnancy - Action News
Home WebMail Saturday, November 23, 2024, 02:30 PM | Calgary | -11.9°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Calgary

Baby news? Calgary zoo hoping for giant panda pregnancy

Panda handlers are on baby watch at the Calgary zoo after Er Shun, a giant panda, was inseminated on Tuesday.

Er Shun is fertile just a few days per year

One of Er Shun's twin cubs, born at the Toronto Zoo, at about eight weeks old. The cubs were the first-ever giant pandas born in Canada and are now residing at the Calgary Zoo. (Toronto Zoo)

Panda handlers are on baby watch at the Calgary zoo after Er Shun, a giant panda on loan from China, was inseminated on Tuesday.

Colleen Baird,manager of animal care for the zoo, says it could take several weeks to find outif Calgary willbe the birthplace ofany panda babies.

Theprocess is delicate. For the past few weeks, handlers have been carefully monitoring the female's estrogen and progesterone levels to pinpoint the narrow window of opportunity for pregnancy,Bairdtold theCalgary Eyeopener.Giant pandas ovulate only once per year.

"There's a certain point when she cycles that it's time to inseminate, and those values are what we need to make sure we have the right timing," Baird said.

"It'sabout two to three days. We have a Chinese specialist here with us whodoes insemination. We consult with him and make sure that we'reon the right track. And he felt really good about where we were, and the way that the insemination was we're feeling pretty confident."

Preparations involved "a lot of collecting urine" and keeping Er Shun happy and calm duringthe spring mating season.

"That can betough when pandas are going through cycles, because she's experiencing quite a change in hormones," Baird said.

Zoo staff are hoping Er Shun, the adult female giant panda, will soon become pregnant. Er Shun is one of four giant pandas on loan from China. (Adrian Wyld/Canadian Press)

Gestation usually takes between 95and 160 days.

"One thing is that we we use frozen sperm, and that's dictated by China," Baird said. "And so we'll see how our chances are, which is never as good as fresh. But I got to see the samples through a microscope and there's lots of swimmers in there. So we're hoping."

The father is notDa Mao, the male giant pandawho is also at theCalgary Zoo, buta donor from China, which Baird says has to do with lineage.

"This go around, DaMao might not be the best genetic match," she said. "As the population changes and more of his lineage or relatives are producing more cubs and pandas, his value decreases. Sothis year using DaMaowasn't really an option. The frozen ones had a better genetic match with Er Shun for this go around. We're hoping thatwe get cubs."

Baird says it could take a whileto find out whether the panda has become pregnant. There's no blood test, and giant pandas don't necessarily showtheir pregnancies.

"Pandas are complicated because they're delayed implanters. So if we were successful at fertilizing the egg, that eggcan be floating around unattached to the uterus. And there's a lot of environmental factors and hormonal factors that tell her when the right time is for that egg to implant, that says, 'Hey, I can take care of this cub andI'm healthy enough, I'm safe enough to do so,'" she said. "So we don't know when that moment happens. It's kind of a mystery."

Baird said the team will wait "several weeks" before checking via ultrasound.

"It could still be weeks and weeks before the egg will implant," she said. "So it's a guessing game, but we'll start taking a peek probably in late May or early June."

The Calgary Zoo welcomedfour giant pandas last spring:Da Mao, Er Shunand her two cubs,Jia YueYue and Jia PanPan. The rare animals are on loan from China for five years, housed in anexhibit calledPanda Passage.

With files from theCalgary Eyeopener.