A rambunctious panda bear cub celebrated a rare first birthday with a special cake and traditional Chinese gifts at the Smithsonian National Zoo in Washington on Saturday.
Bao Bao, a 44-pound female, is the second panda in the zoo's history to live a full year, as the endangered species produce tiny and delicate offspring that are often unable to survive infancy, zoo spokeswoman Devon Murphy said Saturday.
"Today, we are celebrating one of our biggest conservation successes," Dennis Kelly, director of the National Zoo, said in a statement. "It's been amazing for us, our members and all of Washington, D.C., to watch Bao Bao thrive and grow."
For her birthday, Bao Bao received several items, including pictures of peaches and bamboo, symbolizing longevity and good health as part of the Chinese tradition of Zhuazhou, the zoo said. Most of the world's 1,600 giant wild pandas live in bamboo forests in central China.
Bao Bao was also able to feast on a tiered cake made of frozen apple juice, dyed shades of pink using beet juice, and apple and pear slices, some of her favorite foods, the zoo said. The cake was decorated with flower shapes carved from carrots and sweet potatoes, and had a large number "1" carved out of frozen juice on top.
Bao Bao, who can been seen in live "panda cam" footage exploring her exhibit at the zoo, is to travel to China and enter the breeding program for giant pandas when she is four years old, the zoo said. The panda cam feed is available at nationalzoo.si.edu/animals/webcams/giant-panda.cfm
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