National Geographic Kids USA - August 2017

(Marvins-Underground-K-12) #1
SMITHSONIAN’S NATIONAL ZOO (BEI BEI OVER FIRST “P” IN TITLE, THREE WEEKS OLD); THE WASHINGTON POST / CONTRIBUTOR / GETTY IMAGES (BEI BEI OVER “N” IN TITLE); SKIP BROWN / NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC CREATIVE (BEI BEI OVER “A” IN TITLE); REBECCA
HALE / NG STAFF (BEI BEI OVER “PA” IN TITLE, BEI BEI NEXT TO “R” IN TITLE, 1, 2, 3); SKIP BROWN (SITTING IN GRASS)

B

ei Bei the giant panda watches as his keeper waves around a
tennis ball. Curious, the six-month-old bear nudges the ball with
his nose. The caretaker responds by feeding the panda a yummy
chunk of cooked sweet potato. Realizing he’ll receive a treat for
jabbing the ball, the animal shoves it again with his schnoz. Sure
enough, his keeper rewards him with another potato slice.
The panda is having fun, but the caretaker is working on something more
serious. Keepers are putting Bei Bei through basic training to teach
him important skills, and this is one of his exercises. The things
Bei Bei learns will help keepers care for the young panda
as he grows from small fuzz ball to full-size adult.

ZOOKEEPERS TEACH A GIANT PANDA
NEWSKILLSTO HELP HIM GROW UP.

BIG BABY
Bei Bei was born at the Smithsonian’s
National Zoo in Washington, D.C., in the
summer of 2015. Hairless and about
the size of a stick of butter, the
newborn spent most of his time
nursing and snuggling with
his mom, Mei Xiang (may
SHONG). Keepers monitored
the pair using cameras
that live-streamed video
from their indoor
enclosure. They’d also
occasionally distract
Mei Xiang with a
snack and sneak the
baby away for a
medical checkup.

Keepers use a tennis ball to teach Bei Bei
movements he’ll use during checkups.

For instance, they feed Bei Bei treats if he
touches the ball with his nose.

Keepers later replace the ball with a hand
signal during checkups—and he still gets
treats!

Keepers use atennis ballto teachBeiBei

1


Forinstancetheyfeed Bei Beitreatsif he

2


Keeperslaterreplacethe ballwitha hand

3


THE THREE-WEEK-OLD
PANDA IS GIVEN AN
EXAMINATION.

BY JAMIE KIFFEL-ALCHEH

Bei Bei
(pronounced

BAY (^) BAY) means
“precious
treasure” in
Chinese.
12 AUGUST 2017

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