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- Q2576461 subject Q13288293.
- Q2576461 subject Q8491871.
- Q2576461 subject Q8766921.
- Q2576461 abstract "Ailuropoda microta is the earliest known ancestor of the giant panda. It measured 1 m (3 ft) in length; the modern giant panda grows to a size in excess of 1.5 m (5 ft). Wear patterns on its teeth suggest it lived on a diet of bamboo, the primary food of the giant panda. The first discovered skull of the animal in a south China limestone cave is estimated to be 2 million years old. The skull found is about half the size of a modern-day giant panda, but is anatomically very similar. This research suggests that the giant panda has evolved for more than three million years as a completely separate lineage from that of other bears.".
- Q2576461 class Q7377.
- Q2576461 family Q11788.
- Q2576461 genus Q535979.
- Q2576461 kingdom Q729.
- Q2576461 order Q25306.
- Q2576461 phylum Q10915.
- Q2576461 wikiPageWikiLink Q10915.
- Q2576461 wikiPageWikiLink Q11788.
- Q2576461 wikiPageWikiLink Q13288293.
- Q2576461 wikiPageWikiLink Q148.
- Q2576461 wikiPageWikiLink Q25306.
- Q2576461 wikiPageWikiLink Q33602.
- Q2576461 wikiPageWikiLink Q35922.
- Q2576461 wikiPageWikiLink Q535979.
- Q2576461 wikiPageWikiLink Q729.
- Q2576461 wikiPageWikiLink Q7377.
- Q2576461 wikiPageWikiLink Q76259.
- Q2576461 wikiPageWikiLink Q8491871.
- Q2576461 wikiPageWikiLink Q8766921.
- Q2576461 classis "Mammalia".
- Q2576461 familia Q11788.
- Q2576461 genus "Ailuropoda".
- Q2576461 ordo Q25306.
- Q2576461 phylum Q10915.
- Q2576461 regnum "Animalia".
- Q2576461 type Animal.
- Q2576461 type Eukaryote.
- Q2576461 type Mammal.
- Q2576461 type Species.
- Q2576461 type Thing.
- Q2576461 type Q19088.
- Q2576461 type Q729.
- Q2576461 type Q7377.
- Q2576461 comment "Ailuropoda microta is the earliest known ancestor of the giant panda. It measured 1 m (3 ft) in length; the modern giant panda grows to a size in excess of 1.5 m (5 ft). Wear patterns on its teeth suggest it lived on a diet of bamboo, the primary food of the giant panda. The first discovered skull of the animal in a south China limestone cave is estimated to be 2 million years old. The skull found is about half the size of a modern-day giant panda, but is anatomically very similar.".
- Q2576461 label "Ailuropoda microta".
- Q2576461 differentFrom Q2315441.