Namibian Cheetah Name Jwala In Kuno National Park Gives Birth To 3 Cubs

newyhub
3 Min Read


Namibian Cheetah name Jwala gave birth to three cubs.

New Delhi:

A Namibian cheetah has given birth to three cubs in the Kuno National Park in Madhya Pradesh, Union Environment Minister Bhupender Yadav said.

“Kuno’s new cubs! Namibian Cheetah named Jwala has given birth to three cubs. This comes just weeks after Namibian Cheetah Aasha gave birth to her cubs. Congratulations to all wildlife frontline warriors and wildlife lovers across the country. May Bharat’s wildlife thrive…,” Mr Yadav said in a post on ‘X’ sharing a video of the three cubs with the cheetah.

Earlier on January 16, in a setback to ‘Project Cheetah’, a Namibian cheetah named Shaurya passed away at the Kuno National Park.

According to an official release by the additional chief conservator of forest and the director of the Lion Project at Kuno, a tracking team noted signs of incoordination and a staggering gait in Shaurya around 11 am on Tuesday, prompting an immediate medical intervention.

“After observing these signs, the cheetah was tranquillised and a weakness was determined during a medical examination. Despite reviving the cheetah through medical intervention, it developed some post-revival complications that eventually resulted in its demise. The animal failed to respond to CPR efforts,” the APCCF and the director of Lion Project was quoted as saying in the statement.

On September 17, 2022, the first batch of eight Namibian cheetahs was released in Kuno National Park (KNP) by Prime Minister Narendra Modi on his birth anniversary. The cheetahs were translocated from Namibia and South Africa as part of a project aimed at reintroducing the big cats, which were extinct in India for several decades.

In the second batch, 12 cheetahs were brought from South Africa. However, of the 20 cheetahs translocated to India in two batches, 8 perished. Subsequently, 12 cheetahs were brought from South Africa and released in Kuno in February, last year.

The translocation was implemented under the supervision of an expert team consisting of government officials, scientists, wildlife biologists and veterinarians from Namibia, South Africa and India, the Ministry of Environment, Forest and Climate Change informed earlier.

(Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by NDTV staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)



//
Share This Article
Leave a comment