During the checkup, officials will try to listen to the cub's heart and lungs, record its weight and collect a DNA sample. The minutes-long health assessment was initially planned for yesterday, but mom Mei Xiang didn't give keepers an opportunity to take her cub, which was born Friday evening and is about the size of a stick of butter.
Brandie Smith, the zoo's curator of mammals, says she and others are "cautiously optimistic" about this cub's health.
She compared the planned exam to a race car pit stop, a fast and highly choreographed checkup before reuniting mom and cub.
An early exam at the zoo is a change from last year, and staff members have made several other changes in preparation for another cub. Mei Xiang's den has been altered to allow keepers to get closer to her, and the zoo also invited a panda expert from China who specializes in newborns to help out.
Zookeepers made two attempts at examining the cub yesterday, but Mei Xiang was cradling the cub and officials were unable to take it for a closer examination, zoo spokeswoman Pamela Baker-Masson said. They planned to try again today.
Information collected during the exam will serve as a baseline for future exams. And the DNA sample, either from a swab of the cub's mouth or feces, will be used to determine the cub's father.
Mei Xiang was artificially inseminated both with sperm from the zoo's male panda, Tian Tian, as well as a male panda at the San Diego zoo, Gao Gao.
