Sisarua, Indonesia — The first giant panda born in Indonesia was stunned when veterinarians checked his hearing and sight and confirmed the cute cub was growing and healthy on Friday ahead of his public debut later this month.
Satrio Viratama, Nicknamed “Rio”, he can walk on his own, climb on top of his mother and has begun eating bamboo shoots. At the age of 169 days, his weight has become 10 kilograms (22 pounds).
Veterinarians are monitoring its development To determine how well he will cope with the crowds when he makes his debut at an Indonesian safari park outside the capital Jakarta.
“What is noteworthy is that all of Rio’s senses are active; he has the ability to sense the environment, assess the situation, adapt to more people and hear voices even in certain levels of noise. We will train him gradually,” said Bongot Huaso Mulia, the veterinarian who is tracking Rio’s progress.
According to Mulia, in some ways their growth is faster than average, especially that of their teeth.
Ryo was born on November 27 to his mother Hu Chun and a male panda Cai Tao, who are both 15 years old. Pair arrived in Indonesia on a 10-year conservation partnership with China in 2017. They live in an enclosure built for them in the park, about 70 kilometers (43 mi) from Sisarua, the capital of West Java province.
Both of these adult pandas have a huge fan base in Indonesia. Ryo’s birth has attracted many panda enthusiasts, and his public debut is being eagerly awaited, with many requests on social media to see him soon.
The three of them are living in a three-tiered temple, known as the Panda Palace, on a hill surrounded by about 5,000 square meters of land (1.2 acres) and equipped with an elevator, sleeping areas, medical facilities, and indoor and outdoor play areas.
Rio’s name symbolizes the hope, resilience and shared commitment of Indonesia and China in protecting endangered species.
Pandas are China’s unofficial mascot and loans of animals to foreign zoos by Beijing have long been viewed as soft-power “panda diplomacy.”
Giant pandas have difficulty reproducing and births are especially welcomed. There are fewer than 1,900 giant pandas left in their only wild habitat in the Chinese provinces of Sichuan, Shaanxi and Gansu.
Ryo was born through artificial insemination. In addition to the new individual, Rio also provides new genetic data on giant pandas that could help research in Indonesia and China, said Aswin Sumampou, the park’s presidential director.
“This is the moment we have all been waiting for, it is a small victory for us, because we have managed to breed a species that is extremely difficult to breed. Just imagine, for the last two years, no panda has been born in any ex-situ conservation facility around the world. Taman Safari has managed to do this,” Sumampau said.
