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Giant panda picture

Who wouldn't want to save this guy? Photo: popofatticus/Flickr

Pandas are practically the international poster child of wildlife conservation -- hello, the World Wildlife Fund even uses the iconic animal in their logo. The adorable black-and-white bears are cute, charismatic and, thanks to poaching and habitat loss, at very real risk of extinction.

Now the giant panda has become the center of a debate incited by BBC wildlife broadcaster Chris Packham. Packham is known for his nature photography and natural history books and is the host of the BBC wildlife program "Springwatch." It's his job to educate the public about nature and the environment, so it was surprising when the broadcaster didn't mince words when discussing pandas in a recent radio interview, reports the London Times.

"Here is a species that, of its own accord, has gone down an evolutionary cul-de-sac. It's not a strong species...I reckon we should pull the plug. Let them go, with a degree of dignity," Packham said on air, according to the Times.

That's just batty, says Colby Loucks, the deputy director of the conservation science program at the World Wildlife Fund (WWF). True, saving pandas presents a unique challenge, since the bears focus 99 percent of their diet on bamboo. "But I don't think [pandas] went down that 'evolutionary cul-de-sac' of their own accord," Loucks told Paw Nation.

Historically, Loucks explained, bamboo forests covered a much larger area in Asia than they do today. "Humans co-opted almost all of that area for themselves," he said. After humans cut down huge amounts of bamboo forests, the pandas were left stranded in a relatively small pocket of bamboo forests in China. But that's our fault, not theirs."

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