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How do giant pandas eat bamboo?

Before eating bamboo, giant pandas will smell the bamboo piles, choose their favorite ones, comb the bamboo leaves to remove dirt and dead branches, and then sit down and start eating.

Giant pandas like eating bamboo shoots. If there are no bamboo shoots, they like to eat the tender parts of bamboo poles. They grab bamboos with their forepaws and hind feet and send them to their mouths one by one. Generally, the lower part of the bamboo pole is directly thrown away.

Giant pandas are usually very docile. When they meet people for the first time, they usually cover their front paws, or lower their heads and don't show their true feelings. They seldom take the initiative to attack other animals or people. They always avoid them when they meet by chance in the wild. But once she becomes a mother, her baby is sacred. Even if she cares about visiting, she will be angry with her mother, showing her teeth and touching her hands.

Sometimes they also like to make some modifications and other fitness activities. You can straighten your body like a cat, stretch forward and lift it half-way, so that you can stretch your body flexibly, or yawn after waking up. If you get wet or cross a river, you can shake off the water like a dog.

Living habits of giant pandas:

Giant pandas spend half their eating time every day, and most of the rest time in sleep. In the wild, giant pandas sleep for 2-4 hours between meals. Lying flat, lying on the side, prone, stretching or curling are their favorite sleep styles. In the zoo, the keepers feed them regularly, twice a day, so the pandas spend the rest of their time resting.

Giant pandas are good at climbing trees and love to play. Climbing a tree is generally a way for the weak to avoid the strong when approaching the marriage proposal period, or avoiding danger, or meeting each other. Pandas sometimes go down to valleys, string into houses in small villages or mountain villages, use pots and pans, especially round utensils, as toys, and then discard them in Shan Ye after playing. Sometimes they get along well with sheep, pigs and other domestic animals and live with them.