Panda Gigante vs Tiburón cigarro
Ailuropoda melanoleuca compared with Isistius brasiliensis
Key Differences
- Panda Gigante is Vulnerable while Tiburón cigarro is Least Concern.
Taxonomic Classification
| Rank | Panda Gigante | Tiburón cigarro |
|---|---|---|
| Kingdom same | Animalia (Animals) | Animalia (Animals) |
| Phylum same | Chordata (cordados) | Chordata (cordados) |
| Class | Mammalia (mamíferos) | Elasmobranchii |
| Order | Carnivora (carnívoros) | Squaliformes (Squaliformes) |
| Family | Ursidae (Bears) | Dalatiidae |
| Genus | Ailuropoda (Giant Pandas) | Isistius |
| Species | Ailuropoda melanoleuca | Isistius brasiliensis |
Evolutionary Relationship
Panda Gigante and Tiburón cigarro share a common ancestor at the Phylum level: Chordata. (cordados)
Conservation Status
Panda Gigante
VU — VulnerablePopulation: ~1.9K
Trend: Increasing ↑
Tiburón cigarro
LC — Least ConcernPhysical Characteristics
| Attribute | Panda Gigante | Tiburón cigarro |
|---|---|---|
| Diet | Herbivore | — |
| Average Lifespan | 20 years | — |
| Average Length | 1.5 m | — |
| Average Weight | 100.0 kg | — |
Habitat & Geographic Range
Panda Gigante
Found across multiple habitat types including tropical and subtropical moist broadleaf forests, temperate coniferous forests, and temperate broadleaf and mixed forests, among 7 distinct biome types spanning the Indomalayan and Palearctic realms. Populations are also found in montane and highland environments at higher elevations.
Found in China. Currently classified as Vulnerable on the IUCN Red List, this species faces significant conservation challenges across its range.
Tiburón cigarro
Native to Asia and Europe and South America, inhabiting ecosystems characteristic of the region.
Distributed across Chile, Norway, and Taiwan.
Panda Gigante
El panda gigante (Ailuropoda melanoleuca) es un animal emblemático de China, célebre por su pelaje blanco y negro y su dieta basada casi exclusivamente en bambú. Su estado de conservación es vulnerable (VU), es el animal bandera de la conservación internacional de la vida silvestre, y su población ha experimentado cierta recuperación en los últimos años.
Tiburón cigarro
The cigar shark, also known as the cookiecutter shark (Isistius brasiliensis), is a small but remarkable shark in the family Dalatiidae, found throughout warm oceanic waters worldwide in tropical and subtropical latitudes. Reaching only 40–50 centimeters in length, it possesses oversized jaws with large, triangular lower teeth arranged in a saw-like series that cut distinctive circular plugs of flesh from much larger prey—including tuna, dolphins, whales, billfish, and even submarine cables and human bodies. It does not kill its prey but instead latches on, rotates its body, and excises a characteristic cookie-cutter-shaped bite. The cigar shark is bioluminescent, emitting a green glow from photophores on its ventral surface that may serve as counter-illumination or to attract prey from below. It undertakes diel vertical migrations, ascending to shallower waters at night and descending to mesopelagic depths during the day. The species is classified as Least Concern by the IUCN, with a vast oceanic distribution and no targeted commercial fishery. It is occasionally taken as bycatch. The geographic epithet brasiliensis refers to Brazil, where early specimens were described, but the species' range is circumglobal in warm oceans. The cookiecutter shark's feeding strategy is one of the most unusual among elasmobranchs.
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