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Roar-some Adventure Begins! 

ZooBorns
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London Zoo’s three Asiatic lion cubs have been pictured taking their first steps outside with mother Arya.
The 8-week-old cubs appeared tentative at first, looking to mum for reassurance, but were soon spotted skipping around their Indian-inspired habitat, chasing each other and playing with mum's tail.
The cubs, born on 13 March 2024, have so far spent their time cosied up in their special indoor cub dens with mum. The trio are yet to be sexed, and this will happen during their first health check later this month. From their first moments of nursing to their playful antics inside the den, every development has been closely monitored by zookeepers and captured on the zoo’s hidden “cubcam”.
The three cubs are an important addition to the conservation breeding programme, which safeguards a healthy population of the Critically Endangered species. Surviving only in the Gir Forest in Gujarat, India, the wild population is particularly vulnerable to disease or natural disaster. Recent population estimates suggest that only 600 to 700 individuals remain in the wild.
Visitors will now be able to catch sight of Arya and her cubs at London Zoo. To find out more about the conservation zoo of Asiatic lions and book to visit London Zoo, visit londonzoo.org.

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6 сен 2024

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Комментарии : 10   
@mariea1431
@mariea1431 3 месяца назад
Grow up strong, Little Babies! ROAR❤
@kryp49
@kryp49 3 месяца назад
Beautiful little puddins. ❤❤❤❤❤❤
@pepita7053
@pepita7053 3 месяца назад
Beau travail!❤❤😊😊
@helene48
@helene48 3 месяца назад
Adorables bébés......❤❤❤
@quiggc1
@quiggc1 3 месяца назад
Can lions born in zoos really help lions in the wild?
@ZooBorns
@ZooBorns 3 месяца назад
Via ZSL London Zoo: When visiting London Zoo you will see lots of animals that are part of conservation breeding programmes. This means they are part of a concerted effort to save their species with a population that could eventually be released back into the wild. For many of the species involved this goal remains out of reach at the moment because their natural habitats are so depleted they can’t sustain populations, and the animals’ wild counterparts are steadily declining or possibly already extinct-in-the-wild. But for others the news is better and London Zoo conservationists have been able to successfully breed and reintroduce animals back to the wild. This includes animals like the partula snail, northern bald ibis, fen raft spider and many others over the years. We are also able to use everything we learn from keeping animals here to advise vets and conservationists in other countries reintroducing animals from protected breeding populations elsewhere. This includes species like griffon vultures, hihi birds and even Amur tigers in Russia.
@alezot6141
@alezot6141 3 месяца назад
To make an example, my local zoo is one of many that recently partecipated to an acustic research. The goal is to find to develop a reliable way to distinguish individual roaring cats by their voice. This would make much easier identification in the wild, which at this point mostly relies on direct observation or camera traps.
@quiggc1
@quiggc1 3 месяца назад
@@alezot6141 and where, pray tell, is your local zoo and what name is it?
@Alex-ft1df
@Alex-ft1df 3 месяца назад
Yep.
@Menoetia
@Menoetia 3 месяца назад
Yes... With fewer than 1000 left in the wild, all it would take to entirely lose this species is for a new disease to appear and wipe them out - something we've witnessed in more than a dozen other species less threatened. Animals in captivity make it possible to study their biology in order to help wild animals fight deadly new illnesses.
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