Cheetahs brought from Namibia savour their first meal in India, appear playful


PTI, Sep 19, 2022, 2:05 PM IST

Credit: ANI

Siblings Freddy and Alton, two of the eight cheetahs brought from Namibia, were seen frolicking in their quarantine enclosure in Madhya Pradesh’s Kuno National Park on Monday, a day after all of them were served food for the first time since their arrival in India.

Sisters Savannah and Sasha also looked cheerful. The four other cheetahs – Obaan, Asha, Cibili, Saisa – also appeared in good spirits, KNP officials said.

The eight felines – five female and three male and aged between 30 to 66 months- were on Sunday evening served food for the first time since their arrival from the African country to India on Saturday, an official said.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Saturday released these cheetahs brought from Namibia, 8,000 km away from their native place, into a quarantine enclosure at the KNP in Sheopur district as part of a project to revive the population of the animal which became extinct in India in 1952.

On Sunday evening, each of the eight cheetahs was served two kg of buffalo meat. Only one of them ate less, the official said, adding that there was nothing concerning about it.

The cheetahs looked cheerful and active on Monday, said the official who is part of the team keeping a close watch on the movements of the animals.

These animals are believed to take food once in three days, he added.

The new guests are still observing the new surroundings with curiosity, the official said.

On Monday morning, Freddy and Alton were seen running in a playful mood and drinking water often in their enclosure.

The eight cheetahs were given their names in Namibia. ”Right now we don’t have plans to rename them,” the official said.

At the time of their release on Saturday, the big cats looked hesitant. But the initial hesitation appeared to be gradually fading on Monday, he said.

Asked about the Hindi name of a female cheetah ‘Asha’, which means hope, he said it seemed an Indian official might have written it on its cage while the big cats were being brought here.

Veterinarians and experts from India and Namibia are keeping a close watch on the cheetahs in the quarantine enclosure where they will be kept for a month, he added.

In his speech after releasing cheetahs, PM Modi had on Saturday cautioned that they need time to get used to their new surroundings before people can see them in the wild.

”Cheetahs are our guests; we should give them a few months to make Kuno National Park their home,” he said.

The KNP, spread over an area of 750 sq km, is situated on the northern side of Vindhyachal mountains.

Udayavani is now on Telegram. Click here to join our channel and stay updated with the latest news.

Top News

Maha polls: Army, partner forces flew 140 sorties spanning over 77 hours

Sunil Chhetri helps Bengaluru FC stage comeback win over Mohammedan SC

Seer expresses regret over his comments on denying voting power to Muslims

Nearly 50 pc of Dakshina Kannada’s coastline in Karnataka has eroded: MoS K V Singh

Rapid industrialisation shouldn’t come at cost of our environment: Minister Eshwar Khandre

Family court grants divorce to actor Dhanush and Aishwarya Rajinikanth

Belthangady: Three youths drown in river

Related Articles More

Maha polls: Army, partner forces flew 140 sorties spanning over 77 hours

ED arrests Kerala-based man in Qatar bank loan ‘fraud’ case

Kerala Governor appoints vice chancellors to Technological and Digital universities

NIA conducts searches against ‘terror-gangster syndicate’ involved in smuggling arms into India

Maharashtra: Congress MLAs authorise Kharge to nominate CLP leader, chief whip

MUST WATCH

Grafting

Coconut Flower

Prakash Belawadi

Naxal Leader Vikram Gowda

Christmas Cake Fruit Mixing


Latest Additions

Maha polls: Army, partner forces flew 140 sorties spanning over 77 hours

Sunil Chhetri helps Bengaluru FC stage comeback win over Mohammedan SC

Seer expresses regret over his comments on denying voting power to Muslims

Nearly 50 pc of Dakshina Kannada’s coastline in Karnataka has eroded: MoS K V Singh

Rapid industrialisation shouldn’t come at cost of our environment: Minister Eshwar Khandre

Thanks for visiting Udayavani

You seem to have an Ad Blocker on.
To continue reading, please turn it off or whitelist Udayavani.