The latest arrival, which some deemed a miracle because of Mei Xiang’s age, was viewed as a cause for celebration by many as the nation struggles amid the coronavirus pandemic at a time of political divisiveness. At 22 years old, Mei Xiang had a 1 percent chance of a successful birth. She is the oldest panda in the U.S. to give birth.
In a statement on Instagram, the zoo said the birth was “joyous news” and that zookeepers were listening for loud squeals from the cub, a sign that it is healthy.
The zookeepers are “genuinely thrilled” about the birth, Ms. Baker-Masson said.
“The cub has made some strong vocalizations,” she added. “They watched Mei Xiang pick up the cub immediately and do all the right things.”
Earlier on Friday, the zoo announced on Twitter that Mei Xiang had “become increasingly restless and began body licking — both signs that labor has probably started!”
Beginning around 3 p.m., she could be seen huffing around her enclosure on a live video stream of the pandas’ habitat. The news of the birth drew so many people to the zoo’s website to view the livestream that the site crashed.
Pandas are notoriously bad breeders. The animals have a mating “season” of just a few days per year, and whether in captivity or in the wild, giant pandas rarely show the desire or skill to mate, imperiling their survival. In 2014, the World Wide Fund for Nature estimated that there were only 1,864 giant pandas remaining in the wild. So whenever they do get it on, like the couple that got frisky in April in a Hong Kong zoo, it’s a big deal.
Last week, when the zoo announced that the 22-year-old giant panda had “tissue consistent with fetal development,” it cautioned in its statement that there was “a substantial possibility that Mei Xiang could resorb or miscarry a fetus.” The zoo said that scientists do not fully understand why some mammals resorb fetuses.