WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The giant panda cub born at the National Zoo just one week ago died on
Sunday, zoo officials said.While the exact cause of the baby panda's death is yet to be determined, zoo officials said the cub, which weighed just under 100 grams (about 3.5 ounces), was in good body condition and that there were no outward signs of trauma or infection.
The cub's death was
discovered Sunday morning after panda keepers and zoo volunteers heard a
distress vocalization from its mother, Mei Xiang.
The panda cam that
allowed the public to watch the baby and its mother over the Internet
was turned off and zoo staff retrieved the body for evaluation.
The unnamed cub was
born on September 16 after five years of failed efforts at conception.
Fourteen-year-old Mei Xiang was described as a good mother. At the time
of the birth, zoo officials had said the first month of life was crucial
in the life of a panda cub.
This was Mei
Xiang's second cub. She gave birth to her first cub, Tai Shan, July 9,
2005. Tai Shan is now at the China Conservation and Research Center for
the Giant Panda in Wolong.
(Reporting by Donna Smith; Editing by Jackie Frank)