When is a ‘panda’ not a panda – and are any pandas actually bears? (2024)

SAY 'PANDA' and immediately your mind goes big, fluffy, rare – and monochrome. But the infamously partner-picky, bamboo-chewing giant panda endemic to a sliver of China isn't the only creature to answer to the name.

There are in fact two distinct species that share this iconic name: The giant panda, and the red panda. But were you presented with a lineup and told to indicate the panda, one would stick out like a sore, rather red thumb. Despite it actually being the creature most entitled to the name.

Turning red. Or black and white?

Firstly, the most obvious difference. At a standing height of five to six feet and a weighing up to 250 pounds (113 kg), the giant panda – and its higher altitude, slightly slighter subspecies the Qinling panda – is roughly comparable to a stocky, weighty human.

The red panda, however, is roughly comparable to a weighty house cat. The giant panda looks like a black bear in a costume; the red panda looks like a racoon that's gone rusty. Complete with a resplendent, ringed tail, cheese-wedge ears and pointed snout, the red panda is thoroughly cute – but in a way that's thoroughly unlike the other creature with which it shares the ‘p’ word. But is it simply a case of lazy name-calling? Not quite.

Turning Red, the new film from Disney-Pixar, follows Mei Lee, a teenager whose developing emotions cause her to transform into a (rather large) red panda. (The Walt Disney Company is majority owner of National Geographic.)

Photograph by Disney-Pixar

Red in tooth and claw

The word ‘panda’ has an ambiguous origin, but one theory is that it is from either the Nepali nigalyaponya (‘bamboo eater’) or paja(‘claw’).One thing is certain, however – it was applied to the red panda first.

The animal was described by French zoologist Frédéric Cuvier in 1825, who added the scientific nameAilurus fulgens,literally, ‘shining cat.’ Not unforgivably, Cuvier judged the red panda as being a particularly anti-social member of the raccoon family.

“The red pandas are solitary and shy animals,” says Ang Phuri Sherpa, Nepal country director for conservation group The Red Panda Network. “They can be found in pairs at the time of their mating, and when cubs are accompanied by a mother.” Ang Phuri says the panda's name could have originated from another Nepali word, punde, which means ‘having white marks on their face,’ adding:“It is true in terms of etymology thatred panda is the only ‘true’ panda.”

While pandas both giant and red share a common name, given their obvious physical differences you might expect them to not share a scientific name. Confusingly, they almost do. The giant panda's genus isAiluropoda – which in this case means ‘cat-foot’, rather than simply ‘cat’.

And it's in the foot that these apparently dissimilar creatures share one of two fascinating common features: the ‘false thumb’, ormodified sesamoid digit. These specially evolved front paws, each with an elongated wrist bone, allows the animals to manipulate the principle ingredient of their second common feature: diet. Both animals eat bamboo, and have developed this physical trait geared to gripping those tubular stalks, a phenomenon of adaptation to a shared environment known as convergent evolution.

This dietary quirk and their shared habitat in moist, misty mountainous areas of China certainly gives the two pandas something to talk about. But are they related?

The fur of the red panda is typically a russett red, with a similar face 'mask' to the raccoon and a facial colouration ranging from pale (typically in the west) to deep red (in the east.)

Photograph by Joël Sartore, National Geographic Photo Ark

A young Naxi man wears an elaborate hat made of red panda skin, China, 1929. While not nearly as famous as their larger namesakes, red pandas have faced similar threats from habitat loss and hunting for their pelts. This use of the resplendent fur is reminiscent of the ‘'coonskin hat’ made famous by American frontiersmen such as Daniel Boone and Davy Crockett – underlining the red panda's association with the raccoon.

Photograph by Joseph F. Rock, National Geographic Image Collection

Bearing up

The plot thickens when we consider how the giant panda got its name. It was a French missionary and naturalist namedPère Armand David who, whilst roaming the Baoxing county in China'sSichuan Province,first brought the animal to western attention – in 1869, when he saw the shot carcass of a 'whitebear', as he called it. “I believe it to be a new species, not only because of its skin colour, but also because of the hair beneath its feet and other characteristics,” he wrote in his journal.

To Armand David it certainly resembled a bear, with its bulky, shambling gait and thick fur. The locals called it a panda – it ate bamboo, after all – but Armand David disagreed, classifying itUrsus melanoleucus,or ‘black-white bear’. Excited by his find, he began a correspondence withAlphonse Milne-Edwards, a French zoologist, to whom he sent a pelt and a skull for inspection.

China's Sichuan province, home of both the giant panda and the red panda. The latter's habitat is wider, stretching from Nepal in the west toChina's Yunnan andSichuan provinces. In 2020 it was found this has enabled two distinct subspecies of red panda to evolve, which diverged around 250,000 years ago – the more vibrant Chinese red panda, and the paler Himalayan red panda.

Photograph by Ami Vitale, National Geographic

The giant panda was recently reclassified from endangered to vulnerable by the IUCN, due to positive population trends. It's estimated around 1,900 individuals remain in the wild, and increasing.

Photograph by Ami Vitale, National Geographic

Furry fossils

Milne-Edwards questioned the strange creature's classification, claiming the skull, teeth and claws made it more physiologically aligned with a certain red haired, bamboo-eating member of the raccoon family described 40 years before – though clearly having climbed a good way along its own evolutionary branch.Publishing a description in hisRecherches pour servir l’histoire naturelle des mammifčres, Milne-Edwards reclassified it accordingly asAiluropus melanoleucus toreflect what he saw as at least a dotted line to the red panda.

The argument rumbles on. More recently DNA and molecular studies have yielded contradictory results – with some claiming the pandas are in no way related to each other, and others suggesting giant pandas are true bears.Some claim red pandas are actually fancy mustelids – a family that includes weasels, badgers,wolverines, martens and polecats –and that both panda varieties have a streak of raccoon in there somewhere.

What seems unanimous is that neither animal sits contentedly into any group, with both often described as ‘living fossils’– the last of a particularly adventurous evolutionary line.

“Were the lines between the species boiled down, you could argue the giant panda is a bear, but not a panda – and the red panda is a panda, but not a bear.”

The red panda today remains in its very own family,Ailuridae. So too the giant panda, which – while firmly now in the family Ursidae (bears) – retains its unique genus ofAiluropoda.Both continue to be argued over, but with the uneasy consensus that both animals and all their speculated relatives likely shared a common, unfathomably ancient and mysterious ancestor. So heated has the subject around both pandas' place in the animal kingdom that it has prompted wider discussions around what features should be considered as taxonomic dealbreakers when classifying an animal.

In his 1993 book on the subject, The Last Panda, naturalist George B. Schaller acknowledged the classification argument with the peerlessly pithy:“When giving a lecture, I am often asked at the end whether the giant panda is a bear or raccoon. To keep my reply brief, I usually answer, ‘The panda is a panda.’”

Relative fame

So were the lines between the species boiled down, you could argue the giant panda is a bear, but not a panda – and the red panda is a panda, but not a bear.

While red pandas are getting a showcase in the latest Disney-Pixar movie, there's no question the giant panda is the more iconic of the pair – despite the smaller animal facing its own very real challenges. Classified as endangered by the IUCNdue to its declining population,the diminutive forest-dweller has suffered many of the same fates as its bigger namesake. “Their biggest threats in the wild are we, the human being,” says Ang Phuri Sherpa. “Their survival in the wild is highly [related to] the human-induced causes like deforestation and degradation of their habitats, poaching, illegal smuggling, and trade of their skin or pelts.” It's thought around 10,000 individuals remain in the wild.

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As for the giant panda, following decades of declining populations due to the same habitat loss and poaching, it has become an enduring symbol of the need for wildlife conservation. Now with numbers around 1,900 in the wild and breeding programs worldwide to help assuage an already somewhat tricky procreation process, the giant panda was recently reclassified as vulnerable due to a slowly increasing population. Along the way it's become arguably the world's most recognisable animal – ironic, given its ambiguity within science.

In China, its largely serene countenance and 50/50 colour scheme has been likened to the yinyang,the Chinese spiritual symbol denoting balance in opposites.And while the two panda species may seem similarly opposed – likeyin and yang itself – each clearly has more than a little in common with the other.

Turning Red is playing in selected cinemas and streaming on Disney+ from 11 March.

When is a ‘panda’ not a panda – and are any pandas actually bears? (2024)

FAQs

When is a ‘panda’ not a panda – and are any pandas actually bears? ›

The giant panda is indeed a species of bear as a member of the family Ursidae (Bears). The red panda on the other hand is not, it's part of a family closer to raccoons and such than to carnivorans like bears.

Are pandas really a bear? ›

For many decades, the precise taxonomic classification of the giant panda was under debate because it shares characteristics with both bears and raccoons. In 1985, molecular studies indicate the giant panda is a true bear, part of the family Ursidae.

What are pandas if they aren't bears? ›

The name panda is believed to come from the Nepali word "ponya," meaning "bamboo eater” or “bamboo footed." Despite sharing a common name, giant pandas and red pandas are not closely related. Red pandas are the only living members of their taxonomic family, Ailuridae, while giant pandas are in the bear family, Ursidae.

What is the difference between a panda and a bear? ›

Giant pandas have a large, pad covered bone that helps them grip bamboo. Other bears have this bone, but it is much smaller. Giant Pandas eat bamboo. Other bears eat insects and small mammals.

Are red pandas actually bears? ›

Phylogenetically, the red panda falls under a unique taxonomic group called Ailuridae, sharing common traits with mustelids, which includes racoons, weasels and skunks. Giant pandas are classified under a separate, distant taxonomic family of bears called Ursidae.

Do pandas accept humans? ›

Giant pandas are docile overall and often lower their heads or shade their faces with their front paws in an attempt to conceal themselves when they come across a human for the first time. They seldom attack people or other animals, choosing to try and evade conflict first.

Did pandas once eat meat? ›

A new study has revealed that long before they took up a strict vegetarian diet, the much-loved panda was a meat eater.

Is a raccoon a bear? ›

Raccoons and bears are part of the order Carnivora, so they do share the same order and they are both mammals but they are not part of the same family. Raccoons are part of the Procyonidae family while bears are part of the Ursidae family.

Are koalas considered a bear? ›

Here's the truth: Despite some pop culture references to adorable “koala bears”, the species you can see all winter at Gumleaf Hideout is actually a marsupial, not a bear. Marsupials are mammals that have a pouch; think other Australian animals like kangaroos and wallabies.

Why can't pandas get pregnant? ›

Female pandas ovulate just once a year, in the spring.

What's more, the female can only conceive for about two or three days around ovulation, which means she has to mate with a male during that period. Females can be fertile between the ages of about 4 to 20.

Can a panda and a grizzly bear have a baby? ›

Overall, this study shows that evolution in the bear family (Ursidae) has not been strictly bifurcating, but instead showed complex evolutionary relationships. All the Ursinae species (i.e., all bears except the giant panda and the spectacled bear) appear able to crossbreed.

Is a red panda not a panda? ›

The red panda is not related to the giant panda. The giant panda belongs to the Ursidae family (Bears) and the red panda belongs to its own taxonomically unique Family: Ailuridae. The giant panda and the red panda do however share some of the same characteristics and a common ancestor.

Who would win, tiger or bear? ›

Guys, it's tigers. By all accounts, they are stronger, more agile, and more aggressive than bears.

Is panda a cat? ›

The red panda is actually more in line with a racoon or a skunk, rather than a bear. It's the only member of the Ailuridae family. The scientific name for a red panda is Ailurus fulgens, which means “red, shining cat.”

Are pandas intelligent? ›

Pandas are intelligent animals with complex behaviour and a good memory. Their cognitive ability is comparable to that of chimpanzees and gorillas. However, their intelligence is often underestimated due to their slow-moving demeanour.

Are pandas aggressive? ›

Giant pandas are solitary and peaceful animals, which will usually avoid confrontation, but if escape is impossible, they will certainly fight back. And as cuddly as they may look, pandas can protect themselves as well as most other bears by using their physical strength, and powerful jaws and teeth.

Did pandas evolve from bears? ›

This was settled in the 1980s, when genetic analysis revealed that the ancestor of the red panda had in fact split off from the ancestors of bears between 30 and 50 million years ago. The ancestors of the giant panda evolved around 10 million years later, making them the oldest bear lineage.

Is A panda A Marsupial or a bear? ›

Pandas are not classified as marsupials. They belong to the order Carnivora and the family Ursidae, which makes them true bears. Marsupials are a separate group of mammals, belonging to the infraclass Marsupialia, which includes animals like kangaroos, wallabies, and koalas.

Are pandas as aggressive as bears? ›

Giant pandas are solitary and peaceful animals, which will usually avoid confrontation, but if escape is impossible, they will certainly fight back. And as cuddly as they may look, pandas can protect themselves as well as most other bears by using their physical strength, and powerful jaws and teeth.

What bear is not a bear? ›

Do you think a koala is a bear? Keep reading to find the answer! Here's the truth: Despite some pop culture references to adorable “koala bears”, the species you can see all winter at Gumleaf Hideout is actually a marsupial, not a bear.

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