Previous attempts by Chinese authorities to
release pandas into the wild have proved unsuccessful. The last bear that was
set free in 2006 was found dead after 10 months, apparently killed by wild
pandas.
This time round, scientists are releasing the
six pandas in stages in a bid to increase their chances of survival, as they try
and bring the number of endangered bears in the wild up from the current
1,590.
On Wednesday, Xing Rong, Xing Ya, Gong Zai,
Ying Ying, Zhi Zhi and Qi Qi -- aged between two and four -- ambled slowly into
their new enclosures in the southwestern province of Sichuan to the flash of
cameras.
They will stay in their enclosures in
Dujiangyan for a minimum of two months before being let out in a much larger
hillside valley nearby, which has been fenced off. Eventually, if all goes well,
they will be released into the wild.
Qi Dunwu, head of animal behaviour at the
Chengdu panda base near Dujiangyan, told AFP the valley had been kitted out with
security cameras to enable vets to observe the pandas without disturbing
them.
The bears will be left to fend for themselves
to learn crucial survival skills, and scientists plan to gradually reduce human
interactions until they can live in the wild without any assistance.
There
have already been 10 attempts at setting pandas free over the past 30 years, and
only two are thought to have been successful as the bears find it very hard to
survive on their own, the official Xinhua news agency said.
Of the 10, Xiang Xiang -- the panda that was
set free in 2006 -- was found killed, another is also believed to have died, and
six of the animals were sent back to the Chengdu base after they lost too much
weight, it said.
But scientists hope that releasing six strong,
young pandas together -- unlike previous attempts to release the bears
individually -- will help them survive.