Ahmedabad / Rajkot: Saving leopards at Gujarat facilities that benefit from rest and recovery but in bargains must release one aspect in their wild way – they cannot date.
The rapidly growing population of leopards in the state has spurred the policy of large cats in the Sakcharbaug Center in Junagadh.
Indeed, the leopard who was saved was not given a student accommodation.
This facility now accommodates 52 Tutap Tutap – 24 men and 28 women – while having room for only 60 animals as a whole.
“The leopard who was arrested from the wild was not allowed to breed in the rescue center.
Male and female in separate,” confirmed an official of the Senior Gujarat Forest Department.
‘There is no value in preserving the time of Leopardseach, it’s time for the Sakkarbaug Rescue Center to touch its capacity, the leopard is transferred to the nearest rescue facility.
Over the past two years, 108 leopards have been transferred from Sakarbaug to Greens Zoological Rescue and the Rehabilitation Center (GZRRC) in Jamnagar.
“We received a leopard in the GZRRC from Sakcharbaug in line with our MoU with the Gujarat government,” said Parimal Nathwani, Director, RIL.
Nathwani said, “We take care of the saved leopard who is not suitable for the release immediately to the wild.” “Our goal is to serve injured leopards and pain and orphans,” said Nathwani.
The facilities of other forest departments, in Range Devalia in the Gir-Somnath district, already have around 40 leopards.
Gujarat’s official wildlife census showed that the leopard population jumped to 3,200 by 2021 of 1,395 in 2016.
The decision to separate the men and women’s leopard population was based on August 6, 2014, notifications issued by the Central Zoo Authority (CZA).
“Leopards and species breed pre-pre-to Antia have no conservation value,” said the notice.
“Leopards can marry and breed in natural settings including the field of sugar cane and shrubs,” said R D Cambara, former Director of Gujarat Ecological Education Education and Research (GEER).