See these stunning photos of pandas born in captivity soon to be released into the wild

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Tuesday, July 19, 2016
Blind, nearly hairless, squeaky, and 1/900 the size of its mother, a newborn panda is as needy as it gets.
Caretaker Li Feng cradles her precious charge by the window of Bifengxia's panda nursery, the most popular stop for visitors touring the facilities.
Three-month-old cubs nap in the panda nursery at Bifengxia. A panda mother that bears twins usually fails to give them equal attention.
Zhang Hemin-"Papa Panda" to his staff-poses with cubs born in 2015 at Bifengxia Panda Base.
Wolong Reserve keepers transport Hua Jiao (Delicate Beauty) for a health check before she finishes "wild training."
In a large forested enclosure of the Wolong Reserve, panda keepers Ma Li and Liu Xiaoqiang listen for radio signals from a collared panda training to be released to the wild.
Ye Ye, a 16-year-old giant panda, lounges in a wild enclosure at a conservation center in Wolong Nature Reserve.
Caretakers for the pandas have to wear costumes scented with panda urine so the animals won't get used to humans.
Triple the cuteness-and the work. One mom cares for all these cubs, only one of which she bore.
Photographer Ami Vitale captured stunning images of pandas being released back into the wild for a National Geographic magazine story.
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See these stunning photos of pandas born in captivity soon to be released into the wildBlind, nearly hairless, squeaky, and 1/900 the size of its mother, a newborn panda is as needy as it gets.
© Ami Vitale / National Geographic

National Geographic has stunning photos of pandas born in captivity that are getting ready to be released into the wild.

The images, captured by photographer Ami Vitale, show the pandas and their caretakers as they get ready for life in the Chinese wilderness.

"It's one thing to raise animals in captivity before adoring crowds and another to ensure a species' survival in nature," Jennifer S. Holland wrote for National Geographic. "Whatever comes next in this bear's conservation may decide whether the giant panda becomes a relic behind bars or roams free in the wild."

The process for preparing the animals for life in the wild is meticulous: Keepers have to wear full-body costumes that smell of panda urine so the animals won't get used to humans.

"Like breeding, rewilding pandas 'will take trial and error, time and money,'" Smithsonian ecologist William McShea told National Geographic. "But the Chinese will be successful."