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Xiao Qi Ji has a knack for turning anything into a fun toy — from enrichment items, to pieces of bamboo, to sticks that he finds outside. Our 11-month-old cub is also inquisitive .
Xiao Qi Ji, the youngest giant panda at the National Zoo, turned three on Monday. The Smithsonian celebrated the occasion in style, presenting a showstopping fruitsicle cake made with panda ...
Just like a human toddler, the giant panda cub at the National Zoo is reaching his milestones. The latest: preparing to one day have his own place. Xiao Qi Ji, now 2 years old, has begun visiting ...
New year, new Xiao Qi Ji! Back in January 2021, our giant panda cub was a little wary during his first encounter with snow. On Jan. 3, 2022, the 16-month-old plowed face-first into the fresh ...
Almost two weeks after getting his official name, panda cub Xiao Qi Ji has taken his first steps, according to the Smithsonian's National Zoo. Zoo officials shared the exciting announcement Friday ...
WASHINGTON (WJLA) — After trying sweet potatoes for the very first time, the team at the National Zoo says Xiao Qi Ji is taking a liking to bamboo as well. Before his first virtual close-up ...
Xiao Huang received his BS degree in Nanjing Agricultural University in Biological Sciences and his MS degree in Biochemical Engineering in East China University of Science and Technology in Shanghai ...
The Smithsonian’s National Zoo and Conservation Biology Institute will celebrate giant panda cub Xiao Qi Ji’s (SHIAU-chi-ji) first birthday with a specially tailored fruitsicle cake. Mother Mei Xiang ...
When Xiao Qi Ji turns 4 years old, he will be rehomed to his native China as part of a breeding agreement with the US. There remain only 1,864 giant pandas on Earth, according to the World ...
It feels increasingly less accurate to call Xiao Qi Ji DC’s Baby Panda—but the one-and-a-half-year old displayed a childlike sense of fun when he ventured out into the snow Monday. In the video below, ...
Xiao Qi Ji is an exercise nut. The cub heads outside to climb around on a wooden structure, Thompson wrote, when many of us are still working on that second cup of coffee.
Huang Qi founded “64 Tianwang” together with his then-wife Zeng Li in 1998, and the website continues to be one of the few major mainland-based websites that report and document petitioners’ protests ...
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