The giant panda cub born 13 days ago at the National Zoo in Washington is female and she has a live-in dad, the zoo said today.
"We have another girl in our family," said research scientist Jesus Maldonado of the zoo's genetics centre as father Tian Tian lounged in the morning sunlight and mother Mei Xiang tended to her newborn in private.
Yet to be named, the tiny offspring is the happy outcome of a successful attempt at artificial insemination using a mix of fresh and 10-year-old frozen semen from Tian Tian.
More From This Section
"It has a fat little belly. It's very active. It's very vocal.... It's getting healthier and stronger every day," she told reporters.
The zoo used DNA samples from buccal swabs as well as chromosome tests to pinpoint the cub's paternity and gender.
Mei Xiang had been inseminated twice -- once with semen from Tian Tian, with whom she had failed to mate naturally, and a second time with a mix of semen from both Tian Tian and Gao Gao, a giant panda at California's San Diego zoo.
She carried twins, but the second cub was stillborn, suffering from a fetal development abnormality that left it with only half its skull, said reproductive biologist Pierre Comizzoli of the zoo's species survival centre.
"What we are trying to understand is how this happened," he said.
The cub, about the size of a stick of butter, weighed in at a normal 137 grams at birth. Following Chinese tradition, she won't be named until 100 days after her birthday, in early December.
She is not expect to go on public view before early next year, although so many people around the world are watching her on the zoo's Internet "pandacam" that viewing time is being limited to 15 minutes.
After two years, the newest member of Washington's panda family will be sent to China and become part of a breeding program there, as part of a cooperative breeding agreement.
Pandas are notoriously reluctant breeders when held in captivity. Fewer than 1,600 pandas remain in the wild, mainly in China's Sichuan province, with a further 300 in captivity around the world.
But this summer has been particularly busy in the panda world.
Just last Friday, Hua Zui Ba, already a mother of twins, gave birth again in a Madrid zoo after a gestation period lasting 131 days, zoo officials in the Spanish capital announced.