5.13.2008 8:55 AM
Pandas
Survive China
Earthquake
As Human Death
Toll Mounts, a Rare Bit of Good News from the Epicenter
As the
human death toll mounts from the massive 7.9-magnitude earthquake in China's Sichuan Province,
here's a rare bit of good news: 60 giant pandas, one of the world's most
endangered species, have survived.
The good news comes from the Chengdu research center, one of two national
protected areas for pandas near the epicenter of the quake. There's no word yet
from the other, Reuters reports.
Found
only in China,
the giant panda is the subject of one of the world's most extensive and
cooperative rehabilitation efforts. Zoos all over the world are in the business
of trying to breed pandas in captivity, for re-release in the wild. With only
1,600 living in the wild, the survival of these 60 bears amounts to saving 4%
of the population, a significant amount.
Meanwhile,
the human death toll reveals no good news. Tens
of thousands of people remain buried in rubble, according to the New York Times, and already about 12,000
are known to have died. Only two in 10 buildings remain standing in many towns.
Stymied
by decimated roads, rescue workers have yet to reach some of the more remote
and mountainous areas most affected by the earthquake, and a steady rain
punctuated by more than 300 aftershocks is complicating the effort.
Meanwhile,
the world's relief organizations are stretched somewhat thin, with the struggle
to help Myanmar in the
aftermath of Tropical Cyclone Nargis and the volcanic eruption in South America. In the United
States, wildfires in Florida and tornadoes across the South would
be natural disasters worthy of round-the-clock coverage if not for the severity
of calamities around the world.
...Which
is why it's good to focus for a moment on the survival of a few pandas in the
Chinese wilderness.