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Progress in the ecology and conservation of giant pandas.

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TLDR
The major advancements in ecological science for the giant panda are reviewed, examining how these advancements have contributed to panda conservation and form a foundation for increasing the application of adaptive management approaches.
Abstract
Giant panda (Ailuropoda melanoleuca) conservation is a possible success story in the making. If extinction of this iconic endangered species can be avoided, the species will become a showcase program for the Chinese government and its collaborators. We reviewed the major advancements in ecological science for the giant panda, examining how these advancements have contributed to panda conservation. Pandas' morphological and behavioral adaptations to a diet of bamboo, which bear strong influence on movement ecology, have been well studied, providing knowledge to guide management actions ranging from reserve design to climate change mitigation. Foraging ecology has also provided essential information used in the creation of landscape models of panda habitat. Because habitat loss and fragmentation are major drivers of the panda population decline, efforts have been made to help identify core habitat areas, establish where habitat corridors are needed, and prioritize areas for protection and restoration. Thus, habitat models have provided guidance for the Chinese governments' creation of 67 protected areas. Behavioral research has revealed a complex and efficient communication system and documented the need for protection of habitat that serves as a communication platform for bringing the sexes together for mating. Further research shows that den sites in old-growth forests may be a limiting resource, indicating potential value in providing alternative den sites for rearing offspring. Advancements in molecular ecology have been revolutionary and have been applied to population census, determining population structure and genetic diversity, evaluating connectivity following habitat fragmentation, and understanding dispersal patterns. These advancements form a foundation for increasing the application of adaptive management approaches to move panda conservation forward more rapidly. Although the Chinese government has made great progress in setting aside protected areas, future emphasis will be improved management of pandas and their habitat.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Panda Downlisted but not Out of the Woods

TL;DR: The giant panda (Ailuropoda melanoleuca) is no longer Endangered on the International Union for the Conservation of Nature's (IUCN) storied Red List as discussed by the authors.
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Free mate choice enhances conservation breeding in the endangered giant panda

TL;DR: It is shown that behavioural mate preferences in giant pandas predict reproductive outcomes and that mate preference and other aspects of informed behavioural management could make the difference between success and failure of these programmes.
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Giant panda distributional and habitat-use shifts in a changing landscape

TL;DR: Wang et al. as discussed by the authors analyzed survey data from 57,087 plots collected in approximately three-fourths of the giant panda's distributional range during China's national surveys conducted in 1999-2003 and 2011-2014.
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Do opposites attract? Effects of personality matching in breeding pairs of captive giant pandas on reproductive success

TL;DR: These findings indicate that specific combinations of personality traits showed better reproductive performance than others, and highlight the potential importance of associative mating patterns based on personality for conservation breeding programs for a large number of other species.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

A movement ecology paradigm for unifying organismal movement research

TL;DR: A conceptual framework depicting the interplay among four basic mechanistic components of organismal movement is introduced, providing a basis for hypothesis generation and a vehicle facilitating the understanding of the causes, mechanisms, and spatiotemporal patterns of movement and their role in various ecological and evolutionary processes.
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Monitoring for conservation.

TL;DR: It is argued that monitoring should not be viewed as a stand-alone activity, but instead as a component of a larger process of either conservation-oriented science or management, which would lead to substantial increases in the efficiency and usefulness of monitoring results in conservation.
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Developing the science of reintroduction biology.

TL;DR: It is suggested that the best progress will be made when multidisciplinary teams of resource managers and scientists work in close collaboration and when results from comparative analyses, experiments, and modeling are combined within and among studies.
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Grazing Lawns: Animals in Herds, Plant Form, and Coevolution

TL;DR: Natural selection at the individual level, acting on both animals and plants to produce coevolution among members of the same trophic web, can regulate such ecosystem processes as energy flow and nutrient cycling, and contribute to species coexistence and the resultant species diversity of communities.
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Ecological degradation in protected areas : The case of Wolong Nature Reserve for Giant Pandas

TL;DR: It is generally perceived that biodiversity is better protected from human activities after an area is designated as a protected area, but it is found that this common perception was not true in Wolong Nature Reserve, which was established in 1975 as a “flagship” protected area for the world-renowned endangered giant pandas.
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