Ahmedabad: Gujarat is the capital of Lion India and now the capital of Gandhinagar has made the Indroda Park Landmark Wildlife by uniting all three big cats – lions, tigers and leopards.
Starting on Wednesday, visitors will be able to observe the Majestic Felines in the park.
Each of the separate cages of large cats is open and wilted, creating a unique habitat for individual species.
The new enclosures were inaugurated on Tuesday.
The park now has 214 mammals, 93 reptiles, and 172 birds.
13-year-old lions and 11-year-old female lions are royalties from Menagerie.
These asiatic lions were taken from the Sakkarbuag Zoo in 2018.
This park also has a pair of white tigers.
2.5-year-old tiger and has been taken from Rajkot, while Tigress is a 17-year-old former Kevadia population.
This park has six leopards, the four will be placed in the exhibition.
Park official said that the leopard cover opened into the sky.
Attachments of lions and tigers have a trench.
“The garden design is resolved after studying other zoos,” said U D Singh, Director of the Ecological Education and Research Foundation (GEER) Gujarat.
“Insight of other zoos put into a new design for the park,” Singh said.
Indroda also has herbivores such as Sambar, Buck White, Black Buck, Spotted Rer, and Chinkara.
Also, because the closeness of the park with Sabarmati, Nilgai often looks grazing around it.
A senior official said that the Indroda Park received around 6.5 lakh visitors every year.
Most of them are children and students.
Surfing attachments for big cats will give visitors to a scene without obstacles.
Enclosure lion has a natural stone casing.
Enclosure has a grass gazebo as well as bamboo, mango, and other trees.
Flowering plants are also part of the cage; The animals sometimes rub their bodies to plants to relieve itching.
Officials say that tigers like water and therefore the waterfall has been developed for them.
Because urinating produces ammonia, an open night shelter.
In addition, separate coverings have been arranged for observation, treatment, and feeding animals.
An officer said that it took two months to make animals get acquainted with their environment.
Now acclimatization has been successful, visitors are allowed to enter.
Rishit Shroff, the architect who designed the cover, said that it was usually a trench slope made of RCC (reinforced concrete cement) which was not aesthetic.
But at Indroda Park, pitching stone joins knitting plants and trees to present a more natural atmosphere.
Moat 10 meters wide and five meters, and has been designed to remove the blind point.
Also the height of the lion’s night cage has a hollow space that provides breeding spots for common birds.