Bamboo bear vs

Ailuropoda melanoleuca compared with Colacium vesiculosum

Key Differences

  • Bamboo bear is Vulnerable while is Not Evaluated.

Taxonomic Classification

Rank Bamboo bear
Kingdom Animalia (Animals) Protozoa (protozoário)
Phylum Chordata (cordados) Euglenozoa (Euglenozoa)
Class Mammalia (mamíferos) Euglenoidea (Euglenoidea)
Order Carnivora (carnívoros) Euglenida (Euglenida)
Family Ursidae (Bears) Euglenaceae
Genus Ailuropoda (Giant Pandas) Colacium
Species Ailuropoda melanoleuca Colacium vesiculosum

Conservation Status

Bamboo bear

VU — Vulnerable

Population: ~1.9K

Trend: Increasing ↑

NE — Not Evaluated

Physical Characteristics

Attribute Bamboo bear
Diet Herbivore
Average Lifespan 20 years
Average Length 1.5 m
Average Weight 100.0 kg

Habitat & Geographic Range

Bamboo bear

Habitat

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.

Range

Found in China. Currently classified as Vulnerable on the IUCN Red List, this species faces significant conservation challenges across its range.

Habitat

Native to Europe and South America, inhabiting ecosystems characteristic of the region.

Range

Distributed across Brazil, Denmark, Norway, and Sweden.

Bamboo bear

O panda-gigante (Ailuropoda melanoleuca) é um animal emblemático da China, célebre pela sua pelagem branca e preta e pela dieta baseada quase exclusivamente em bambu. Seu estado de conservação é vulnerável (VU), é o animal-bandeira da conservação internacional da vida silvestre e sua população apresentou alguma recuperação nos últimos anos.

Colacium vesiculosum is a freshwater euglenoid protist in the family Euglenaceae, exhibiting the characteristic sessile colonial growth of the Colacium genus. Distinguished by vesicle-like or bladder-shaped colony structures, this species attaches to the exoskeletons and appendages of zooplankton hosts, particularly copepods and cladocerans, in standing and slow-moving freshwater bodies. As a photosynthetic euglenoid, Colacium vesiculosum possesses green chloroplasts enabling autotrophic energy acquisition under illuminated conditions, supplemented by heterotrophic nutrient uptake when light is limited. The organism does not penetrate host tissues and is considered epibiotic rather than parasitic, though dense colonization may influence host buoyancy and movement efficiency. Colacium vesiculosum contributes to the microbial component of freshwater planktonic communities, serving as potential food for filter-feeding organisms and influencing nutrient recycling in aquatic ecosystems. Its global distribution spans temperate and tropical freshwater habitats, bounded primarily by the availability of suitable crustacean hosts. Taxonomy within Colacium remains an active area of research as molecular tools refine species boundaries that were historically defined by morphological characteristics alone.

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