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Nepal Closes a National Park to Give Mating Red Pandas Some Privacy

Categories: South Asia, Nepal, Environment
 Umi, red panda of Nogeyama Zoo. Image from Flickr by Toshihiro Gamo. CC BY-NC-ND 2.0

Umi, red panda of Nogeyama Zoo. Image from Flickr by Toshihiro Gamo. CC BY-NC-ND 2.0

Langtang National Park [1], Nepal’s first Himalayan national park and the one nearest to capital Kathmandu, has been declared a restricted zone [2] by local authorities to allow red pandas to mate.

The shy creature, called habre in Nepal, loves to live in quiet places and is easily scared by noises. When frightened by sound, it will even leave its young cub behind and run away. As the red panda’s breeding season starts from mid-June, the national park has been closed to visitors and even firewood gathering by locals has been prohibited for two months [2].

With only 10,000 individuals remaining [6] in the world, around 1,000 red pandas are found in eight protected areas of Nepal – from Kanchenjunga Conservation Area in the east to Makalu Barun National Park and Buffer Zone, Sagarmatha National Park and Buffer Zone, Langtang National Park and Buffer Zone, Manaslu Conservation Area, Annapurna Conservation Area, Dhorpatan Hunting Reserve and Rara National Park and Buffer Zone in the west. Besides Nepal, the animal is found in the mountainous regions of India, China, Bhutan, Myanmar and Laos.

The red panda, also called fire fox, was discovered decades earlier [7] than the giant panda. It is a carnivore turned herbivore [7] and feeds mainly on young bamboo shoots and leaves.

Though the shy creature dons the Mozilla Firefox logo [10] and millions of Internet browsers use it daily, only a few know that it is a red panda.

Red pandas are listed as endangered species by the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN). Although red pandas are not poached generally, they fall prey to the traps laid for musk deer and other wild animals. The herders and the chauris, the yak-cow hybrids, disturb and destroy the red panda habitats [12], though not intentionally. Habitat loss is another major concern for conservationists.

The Nepalese government together with the wildlife organisation WWF has involved local communities in the conservation of this species in Langtang. Likewise, the Red Panda Network has been working with communities [13] to monitor and preserve red pandas since 2007.

The restriction period at the Langtang National Park till mid-August will provide a peaceful environment for the red pandas to mate. Soon after, International Red Panda Day [14] will be celebrated on 19 September, further raising awareness about its conservation.