Taipei.
Thousands braved the summer heat Sunday to celebrate the first birthday
of Yuan Zai, the first giant panda cub born in Taiwan, who has
attracted hundreds of thousands of visitors in six months.
Around 3,000 people joined a 10-kilometer run which was part of a series of programs marking the birthday.
Visitors,
many of them children with parents, cheered Yuan Zai when she was
presented with a birthday cake — made of apples, pineapples, carrots and
buns and prepared by the zookeepers.
The
main attraction was when the cub grabbed different cards in “Zhua Zhou,”
a traditional crawling game for one-year-old babies in many Chinese
communities.
The first card or object to be grabbed indicates a future career path or interest, according to custom.
Yuan Zai initially picked up the card for painter, among a variety of others.
The cub made her public debut in January and since then the exhibition centre at Taipei Zoo has often been swamped with fans.
In the six months to June 2.4 million people visited the zoo, about a 50 percent rise over the same period of 2013.
Yuan
Zai was delivered on July 6 last year following a series of artificial
insemination sessions because her parents — Tuan Tuan and Yuan Yuan
— failed to conceive naturally.
She weighed 180 grams at birth but now tips the scales at around 34 kilograms.
Mother
and daughter were reunited for the first time on August 13, a meeting
that saw the giant panda licking and cuddling her baby before they fell
asleep together inside a cage.
Tuan
Tuan and Yuan Yuan, whose names mean “reunion” in Chinese, were given to
Taiwan by China in December 2008 and have become star attractions at
Taipei Zoo, as well as a symbol of warming ties between the former
bitter rivals.
Fewer
than 1,600 pandas remain in the wild, mainly in China’s Sichuan
province, with a further 300 in captivity around the world.
By Agence France-Presse on 04:24 pm Jul 06, 2014
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