Giant pandas have a single diet and live on arrow bamboo. Occasionally, if a bamboo rat is caught, it will show its ancestral instinct of eating meat and eat a big meal. Giant pandas are solitary and like to live alone. During the breeding season, they "live together as husband and wife" and then go their separate ways. Female pandas are ready to give birth to cubs after about 5 months of pregnancy. The newborn cubs are very small, weighing only about 150 grams. The panda mother often holds them in her arms and cannot put them down. The red pandas begin to live independently when they are two years old before their mother's eyes.
In the wild, both male and female giant pandas usually live solitary lives. Each individual’s activity range is about 4-7 square kilometers, so its population usually consists of scattered It is composed of individuals, each inhabiting the same environmental conditions, sharing the food source of the same area, relying on and restricting each other, and naturally forming a unified whole.