International conservation group WWF is recruiting four panda watchers for a five-day research and patrol program in Sichuan province.
            
            
                CHENGDU - International conservation group WWF is recruiting four  panda watchers for a five-day research and patrol program in the  wilderness of Southwest China's Sichuan province.
The ideal candidates should be avid bloggers who are eager to share  text, photos and video of their experiences with other Internet users,  WWF said on its micro blog at weibo.com.
Other qualifications include advanced photography skills, a love of  animals, a desire to help protect critically-endangered wild pandas and  good health - as the panda watchers will need to hike eight hours a day  in the wild mountains, it said.
Applications are open online from Oct 8 to 14.
The program, scheduled to run from Oct 23 to 27, will be held at the  Heizhugou Nature Reserve in Ebian county in the suburbs of Leshan.
The panda watchers will take two routes into the reserve, where they  will use GPS and ultrared cameras to identify and record traces of wild  pandas, and share their findings with WWF's panda researchers and local  villagers.
WWF said the event is aimed at promoting public awareness of both the  giant panda's role in the ecosystem and how ordinary people can get  involved in wild panda protection.
Since 1999, WWF has worked with China's forestry authorities and  research bodies to launch 1,140 routes across major panda habitats in  Sichuan, Shaanxi and Gansu provinces for scientific surveillance and  patrolling as well as to fight against illegal poaching.
Statistics from the State Forestry Administration show that about  1,600 pandas live in the wild and about 300 are held in captivity at  zoos worldwide.
Panda researchers said about half of the giant panda habitats and  one-third of the pandas are not effectively protected, as a result of  natural disasters, climate change and human activities.