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This is the reason why pandas are black and white

Humans are curious to know why pandas have black and white patches on their body. Well, the giant pandas did not get their unique patches to look cute in human eyes.

This is the reason why pandas are black and white

New York: Humans are curious to know why pandas have black and white patches on their body. Well, the giant pandas did not get their unique patches to look cute in human eyes.

However, a new study has revealed that the black and white patches help them hide in snowy habitats and also to communicate.

According to findings, the giant panda's distinct black-and-white markings have two functions, camouflage and communication.

Tim Caro, Professor at University of California, Davis in the US and lead author of the research said, "Understanding why the giant panda has such striking colouration has been a long-standing problem in biology that has been difficult to tackle because virtually no other mammal has this appearance, making analogies difficult".

Caro said, "The breakthrough in the study was treating each part of the body as an independent area".

This enabled the team to compare different regions of fur across the giant panda's body to the dark and light colouring of 195 other carnivore species and 39 bear subspecies, to which it is related.

Then they tried to match the darkness of these regions to various ecological and behavioural variables to determine their function.

Through these comparisons, the study found that most of the pandas -- its face, neck, belly, rump -- is white to help it hide in snowy habitats.

The arms and legs are black, helping it to hide in shade.

The scientists suggest that this dual colouration stems from its poor diet of bamboo and inability to digest a broader variety of plants.

This means it can never store enough fat to go dormant during the winter, as do some bears. So it has to be active year-round, travelling across long distances and habitat types that range from snowy mountains to tropical forests.

The markings on its head, however, are not used to hide from predators, but rather to communicate.

Dark ears may help convey a sense of ferocity, a warning to predators. Their dark eye patches may help them recognise each other or signal aggression toward panda competitors, the study said.

The study was published in the journal Behavioral Ecology.

(With IANS inputs)