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Scientists decode giant panda language

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2015-11-05 08:49Xinhua Editor: Gu Liping

Would you ever have imagined that giant pandas would baa like sheep to say "I love you", or warble a cheerful "I do" when wooed by a suitor?

Staff at panda breeding center in southwest China's Sichuan Province have decoded 13 different kinds of giant panda vocalizations, an surprising new insight in the private lives of these reclusive creatures.

The China Conservation and Research Center for the Giant Panda (CCRCGP) has been working on a panda linguistics project since 2010. They first made recordings of pandas in the center, cubs and adults, in various situations: when they were eating, mating, nursing, fighting and so on, said Zhang Hemin, head of the CCRCGP.

Then collected a large amount of data on pandas' voices and activities, and analyzed the voiceprints.

"We managed to decode some panda language and the results are quite interesting," said Zhang.

Panda cubs can barely speak at all except to say things like "Gee-Gee" (I'm hungry), "Wow-Wow" (Not happy!) or "Coo-Coo" (Nice!).

"Adult giant pandas usually are solitary, so the only language teacher they have is their own mother," said Zhang.

When they grow a little and they can learn from their mother how to express themselves by roaring, barking, shout, squeaking, bleating and chirping.

"If a panda mother keeps tweeting like a bird, she may be anxious about her babies. She barks loudly when a stranger comes near." The barking can be interpreted as "getting out of my place". Pandas can be as gentle as lamb when they are "in love". Male pandas baa all the time when they are wooing to their lovers. The females respond with constant tweeting if they feel the same.

"Trust me. Our researchers were so confused when we began the project that they wondered if they were studying a panda, a bird, a dog, or a sheep," said Zhang.

The center plans to continue the study and are looking forward to the invention of panda translator which may use high-tech voice recognition technology.

"If we can understand their language, it will help us protect the animal, especially in the wild," he said.

Fewer than 2,000 pandas live in the wild, mostly in the provinces of Sichuan and Shaanxi. There were 375 giant pandas in captivity at the end of 2013, about 200 of them at the CCRCGP.

  

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