Zhou also told me about the panic that struck everyone in the aftermath of the earthquake. All the staff at Bifengxia feared for the lives and safety of their loved ones in Wolong and Dujiangyan. Many broke down in tears under the stress of not knowing. I also learned that the building where Zhou lives in Dujiangyan is okay, but the buildings where most of the Wolong staff lived are uninhabitable. These families have been moved to Bifengxia where they are doing well but living in crowded conditions.
The situation at Wolong itself is still pretty rough, but there have been some improvements. Most importantly, there is food and medicine. In addition to the helicopters and foot soldiers bringing in supplies, they have now opened the road leading out of Wolong up to Baoxing County. This road leads away from Dujiangyan into remote mountains and beautiful villages, many above 12,000 feet (3,600 meters). The road down the mountain to Dujiangyan and the large cities will take months to repair.
Several of the buildings at Hetauping, the panda breeding center, survived the quake, including many but not all of the enclosures. The vet hospital was not significantly damaged and can still be used. Shawan, the village 3 miles (5 kilometers) up the mountain that contains the administrative headquarters for the entire reserve, was harder hit, with most buildings uninhabitable. The Wolong people are crammed into about 30 large tents—safe, but probably not very comfortable. Many others are sleeping in their cars.
There has been some confusion on the Web sites and the blog commentaries about deaths at Wolong. I’ve heard reports that up to 20 people are known to be dead in the area, but can’t confirm the number…but certainly people in the reserve were killed. This tragic loss of life, I’ve been told by several people, does not include any of the staff or caretakers at the panda breeding center, but as many as five may have been employees of the Wolong Nature Reserve. Two Reserve staff members were only 5 miles (8 kilometers) from the epicenter and described seeing the earth open up in front of them, close, then open up again. It must have been terrifying.
I’ve also learned that “4 or 5” pandas did escape from the breeding center after the quake, but (perhaps) all but two have been recaptured and are safe. I haven’t learned the identities of the missing pandas and can’t be sure that Hua Mei or her offspring weren’t among them. I think—and hope—probably not. At least two emergency shipments of supplies for pandas have been delivered. Many of the pandas are living in smaller makeshift enclosures, but I don’t know the details.
There have been several comments and questions about the safety of wild pandas. I think it is safe to say that we have no idea what may have happened to the wild pandas. People can spend weeks and months in prime panda habitat, see their signs every day, and still not see a wild panda. Researchers at Wolong have been trying to capture pandas to place GPS collars on them so they can track and study them, but they have not been able to catch any yet. I am working at another reserve in Shanxi province in collaboration with the Institute of Zoology at the Chinese Academy of Science. We have captured and collared pandas, but these are the only pandas with radiotracking devices in the wild anywhere. (They were far from the quake and not harmed.) If you see reports about “pandas in reserves” reported safe or otherwise, they must be referring to pandas in breeding centers, not wild pandas.
Would wild pandas be at risk during an earthquake? Maybe, but I don’t see how they could be decimated. Flying boulders, falling trees and landslides may have put some pandas in jeopardy, but, just as most humans survived if they were not inside large buildings, I think most pandas would survive. Fortunately, pandas are well known for their aversion to steep slopes, instead seeking gentle inclines, ridgetops, and valleys. This would reduce some risk, at least, to the most devastating landslides. But, given the incredibly rugged and remote terrain in panda territory, we will never know just how severe losses in the wild population may have been.
I hope I have answered many of the questions which I’ve seen in the comments and have done my best to ensure their accuracy. But, in situations like this, one can never be 100 percent certain about all the “facts.” I appreciate the outpouring of concern for the pandas and people of Wolong and all the offers of support.
Ron Swaisgood is the co-head of the San Diego Zoo’s Giant Panda Conservation Unit.