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HANFLY Panda Ring 925 Sterling Silver Fashion Animal Jewelry Adjustable Size (US6)

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The red panda is largely herbivorous and feeds primarily on bamboo, mainly the genera Phyllostachys, Sinarundinaria, Thamnocalamus and Chimonobambusa. [60] It also feeds on fruits, blossoms, acorns, eggs, birds and small mammals. Bamboo leaves may be the most abundant food item year-round and the only food they can access during winter. [61] In Wolong National Nature Reserve, leaves of the bamboo species Bashania fangiana were found in nearly 94 per cent of analysed droppings, and its shoots were found in 59 per cent of the droppings found in June. [58] The red panda's lifespan in captivity reaches 14 years. [29] They have been recorded falling prey to leopards in the wild. [73] Faecal samples of red panda collected in Nepal contained parasitic protozoa, amoebozoans, roundworms, trematodes and tapeworms. [74] [75] Roundworms, tapeworms and coccidia were also found in red panda scat collected in Rara and Langtang National Parks. [76] Fourteen red pandas at the Knoxville Zoo suffered from severe ringworm, so the tails of two were amputated. [77] Chagas disease was reported as the cause of death of a red panda kept in a Kansas zoo. [78] Amdoparvovirus was detected in the scat of six red pandas in the Sacramento Zoo. [79] Eight captive red pandas in a Chinese zoo suffered from shortness of breath and fever shortly before they died of pneumonia; autopsy revealed that they had antibodies to the protozoans Toxoplasma gondii and Sarcocystis species indicating that they were intermediate hosts. [80] A captive red panda in the Chengdu Research Base of Giant Panda Breeding died of unknown reasons; an autopsy showed that its kidneys, liver and lungs were damaged by a bacterial infection caused by Escherichia coli. [81] Threats

a b Salesa, M. J.; Mauricio, A.; Peigné, S. & Morales, J. (2006). "Evidence of a false thumb in a fossil carnivore clarifies the evolution of pandas". PNAS. 103 (2): 379–382. Bibcode: 2006PNAS..103..379S. doi: 10.1073/pnas.0504899102. PMC 1326154. PMID 16387860. Datta, A.; Naniwadekar, R. & Anand, M. O. (2008). "Occurrence and conservation status of small carnivores in two protected areas in Arunachal Pradesh, north-east India". Small Carnivore Conservation. 39: 1–10. Archived from the original on 28 June 2022 . Retrieved 18 March 2022. Ummethala, S.S., et al.: THz-to-optical conversion in wireless communications using an ultra-broadband plasmonic modulator. Nat. Photonics 13, 519–524 (2019) a b Dendup, P.; Humle, T.; Bista, D.; Penjor, U.; Lham, C. & Gyeltshen, J. (2020). "Habitat requirements of the Himalayan Red Panda ( Ailurus fulgens) and threat analysis in Jigme Dorji National Park, Bhutan". Ecology and Evolution. 10 (17): 9444–9453. doi: 10.1002/ece3.6632. PMC 7487235. PMID 32953073.a b c Bista, D.; Baxter, G. S.; Hudson, N. J.; Lama, S. T.; Weerman, J. & Murray, P. J. (2021). "Movement and dispersal of a habitat specialist in human-dominated landscapes: a case study of the Red Panda". Movement Ecology. 9 (1): 62. doi: 10.1186/s40462-021-00297-z. PMC 8670026. PMID 34906253. Khangchendzonga National Park, Singalila National Park, Varsey Rhododendron Sanctuary, Shingba Rhododendron Sanctuary, Fambong Lho Wildlife Sanctuary, Kyongnosla Alpine Sanctuary, Pangolakha Wildlife Sanctuary, Maenam Wildlife Sanctuary, [41] Namdapha National Park [87]

Aref, T., Mohamed, A., Ahmed, C.A., Yvon, S., Mohamad, S.: A 1.5 pJ/bit, 9.04 Mbit/s carrier-width demodulator for data transmission over an inductive link supporting power and data transfer. IEEE Trans. Circuits Syst. II Express Briefs 65(10), 1420–1424 (2018) The London Zoo received two red pandas in 1869 and 1876, the first of which was caught in Darjeeling. The Calcutta Zoo received a live red panda in 1877, the Philadelphia Zoo in 1906, and Artis and Cologne Zoos in 1908. In 1908, the first captive red panda cubs were born in an Indian zoo. In 1940, the San Diego Zoo imported four red pandas from India that had been caught in Nepal; their first litter was born in 1941. Cubs that were born later were sent to other zoos; by 1969, about 250 red pandas had been exhibited in zoos. [95] The Taronga Conservation Society started keeping red pandas in 1977. [96] a b Thomas, O. (1902). "On the Panda of Sze-chuen". Annals and Magazine of Natural History. 7. X (57): 251–252. doi: 10.1080/00222930208678667.Li, F.; Huang, X. Y.; Zhang, X. C.; Zhao, X. X.; Yang, J. H. & Chan, B. P. L. (2019). "Mammals of Tengchong Section of Gaoligongshan National Nature Reserve in Yunnan Province, China". Journal of Threatened Taxa. 11 (11): 14402–14414. doi: 10.11609/jott.4439.11.11.14402-14414. a b Liu, X.; Teng, L.; Ding, Y. & Liu, Z. (2021). "Habitat selection by Red Panda ( Ailurus fulgens fulgens) in Gaoligongshan Nature Reserve, China" (PDF). Pakistan Journal of Zoology. 54 (4). doi: 10.17582/journal.pjz/20190726090725. S2CID 238963119. Archived (PDF) from the original on 28 January 2022 . Retrieved 28 January 2022. Karnetzky, C., Philipp, Z., Christopher, T., Carolina, D.S., Martin, W., Reinhard, K., Alexander, H.: Towards femtosecond on chip electronics based on plasmonic hot electron nano-emitters. Nat. Commun. 9(1), 1–7 (2018)

Mohammad, K., et al.: Terahertz radiation enhancement in dipole photoconductive antenna on LT-GaAs using a gold plasmonic nanodisk array. Opt. Laser Technol. 120, 105726 (2019) Fei, Y.; Hou, R.; Spotila, J. R.; Paladino, F. V.; Qi, D. & Zhang, Z. (2017). "Metabolic rate of the Red Panda, Ailurus fulgens, a dietary bamboo specialist". PLOS ONE. 12 (3): e0173274. Bibcode: 2017PLoSO..1273274F. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0173274. PMC 5356995. PMID 28306740. Sharma, H. R.; Swenson, J. E. & Belant, J. (2014). "Seasonal food habits of the Red Panda ( Ailurus fulgens) in Rara National Park, Nepal". Hystrix. 25 (1): 47–50. doi: 10.4404/hystrix-25.1-9033. The family Ailuridae appears to have evolved in Europe in either the Late Oligocene or Early Miocene, about 25to18 million years ago. The earliest member Amphictis is known from its 10cm (4in) skull and may have been around the same size as the modern species. Its dentition consists of sharp premolars and carnassials (P4 and m1) and molars adapted for grinding (M1, M2 and m2), suggesting that it had a generalised carnivorous diet. Its placement within Ailuridae is based on the grooves on the side of its canine teeth. Other early or basal ailurids include Alopecocyon and Simocyon, whose fossils have been found throughout Eurasia and North America dating from the Middle Miocene, the latter of which survived into the Early Pliocene. Both have similar teeth to Amphictis and thus had a similar diet. [19] The puma-sized Simocyon was likely a tree-climber and shared a "false thumb"—an extended wrist bone—with the modern species, suggesting the appendage was an adaptation to arboreal locomotion and not to feed on bamboo. [19] [20] Red pandas are long-day breeders, reproducing after the winter solstice as daylight grows longer. Mating thus takes place from January to March, with births occurring from May to August. Reproduction is delayed by six months for captive pandas in the southern hemisphere. Oestrous lasts a day, and females can enter oestrous multiple times a season, but it is not known how long the intervals between each cycle last. [71]Jones, M. L. (2021). "A brief history of the Red Panda in captivity". In Glatston, A. R. (ed.). Red Panda: Biology and Conservation of the First Panda (Seconded.). London: Academic Press. pp.181–199. doi: 10.1016/B978-0-12-823753-3.00026-0. ISBN 978-0-12-823753-3. S2CID 243805749. a b c Reid, D. G.; Jinchu, H. & Yan, H. (1991). "Ecology of the Red Panda Ailurus fulgens in the Wolong Reserve, China". Journal of Zoology. 225 (3): 347–364. doi: 10.1111/j.1469-7998.1991.tb03821.x. a b Dalui, S.; Khatri, H.; Singh, S. K.; Basu, S.; Ghosh, A.; Mukherjee, T.; Sharma, L. K.; Singh, R.; Chandra, K. & Thakur, M. (2020). "Fine-scale landscape genetics unveiling contemporary asymmetric movement of Red Panda ( Ailurus fulgens) in Kangchenjunga landscape, India". Scientific Reports. 10 (1): 15446. Bibcode: 2020NatSR..1015446D. doi: 10.1038/s41598-020-72427-3. PMC 7508845. PMID 32963325.

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