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    What's this?
National Zoo panda died due to lung and liver damage
The cub's birth followed several years of arduous and unsuccessful attempts to get its mother, Mei Xiang, pregnant.

By

Megan Gannon, LiveScience
Thu, Oct 11 2012 at 10:52 AM

Related Topics:

Wild Animals, Medicine
The deceased cub's parents Mei Xiang and Tian Tian in 2008

The deceased cub's parents Mei Xiang and Tian Tian in 2008. (Photo: Mehgan Murphy/Smithsonian’s National Zoo)

The week-old giant panda cub that died at the Smithsonian National Zoo last month suffered lung and liver damage, veterinarians announced on Oct. 11.
 
The female cub, born Sept. 16, likely had an oxygen deficiency from inadequately formed lungs, which would have affected the newborn's liver function, according to a statement from the zoo.
 
Joy turned to heartbreak at the Washington, D.C., zoo on the morning of Sept. 23 when 14-year-old panda mom Mei Xiang let out a distress call. Panda keepers found her cub unresponsive and immediately performed CPR, but they couldn't revive the newborn. The 4-ounce (100-gram) panda had no outward signs of trauma or infection, zoo officials said at the time, though they later found abnormalities in its liver.
 
The cub's birth followed several years of arduous and unsuccessful attempts to get Mei Xiang pregnant. She had been artificially inseminated on April 29 and 30 with sperm from the zoo's adult male, Tian Tian, but it's almost impossible to tell if a female panda is pregnant until a cub materializes. The panda parents have only one living cub, Tai Shan, who was born in 2005 and brought to China in 2010.
 
Mei Xiang has almost fully returned her regular routine since the cub's death, venturing into her outdoor enclosure and regaining her appetite, vets at the zoo said Thursday.
 
Researchers estimate that there are only 1,600 giant pandas are left in the wild and captive breeding is an important way for them to study and conserve the endangered species.
 
Follow LiveScience on Twitter @livescience. We're also on Facebook & Google+.
 
Related on LiveScience:
  • Butter Balls: Photos of Playful Pandas
  • San Diego Panda Cub About to Sprout Baby Teeth
  • World's Cutest Baby Wild Animals
 
Related panda story on MNN: San Diego panda cub getting his baby teeth
 
This story was originally written for LiveScience and was reprinted with permission here. Copyright 2012 LiveScience, a TechMediaNetwork company. All rights reserved.

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