National Panda Day
Despite being carnivores, giant pandas eat mostly bamboo and spend hours daily consuming it to make up for its low nutrition.
With their black-and-white coats and gentle demeanor, pandas have become global symbols of conservation. Observed on 16 March, National Panda Day highlights this iconic species and the conservation challenges it still faces. Giant pandas are native to China and have faced a high risk of extinction due to habitat loss and low birth rates. Thanks to global conservation efforts, their population is slowly recovering, but more work is needed.
Although pandas are solitary by nature, they communicate through vocalisations and scent marking, especially during mating season. The World Wildlife Fund (WWF) has been at the forefront of panda and habitat protection, supporting efforts to restore bamboo forests and create safe corridors for pandas to roam. Their day is a small calendar note with a big message: when forests are stitched back together, species get a second chance. Celebration matters, but the work that follows matters more—because real achievement is a healthy forest where pandas can simply be pandas.