At a time when we have got used to reports of
animals suffering and dying in zoos, a wildlife enclosure in a sleepy
village of Dakshina Kannada saw the birth of two tiger cubs and four
leopard cubs this week.
With this, the number of tigers at the zoo in
the coastal town of Moodushedde in Mangalore taluka has gone up to 10,
starting with just two in 2004. What’s more, the zoo has taken care to
avoid inbreeding to ensure the offspring are genetically fit.
“It is
good to see the zoo could achieve so many tiger births in eight years.
We have also achieved a high rate of breeding among leopards, black
bucks, reptiles, including rare sand boas, the Indian cobra, vipers and
kraits, prompting the Central Zoo Authority to recognise Pilikula as the
conservation and breeding centre for King Cobras,” the director of the
centre, Jayaprakash Bhandary, told DNA.
When the former deputy
commissioner of Dakshina Kannada district, Bharatlal Meena, first
floated the idea of having a wildlife enclosure on the coast in a small
village, politicians made fun of him and some skeptics even chided him
for suggesting such a ‘foolhardy’ idea.
But Meena carried on with his
plan and today his brainchild, the Pilikula Nisarga Dhama and Dr
Shivarama Karanth biological park have turned into fine centres for
wildlife conservation and one of the main centres in South India to
breed all sorts of animals in captivity.
Old tiger pond
SUCCESS MANTRA ● One of the reasons for the success of tiger breeding at the Pilikula zoo in Moodushedde is its closeness to a natural tiger habitat in the Western Ghats. The word Pilikula literally means a ‘tiger pond’.
One of the
reasons for the success of tiger breeding at the Pilikula zoo in
Moodushedde is its closeness to a natural tiger habitat in the Western
Ghats. The word Pilikula is derived from pili, which means tiger, and
kula, which is a pond. The Pilikula was built in the same place where
tigers used to quench their thirst in the past. There was a natural
forest already existing when the facility was built in 2001, but the
Pilikula Nisarga Dhama Society later made the forest denser and provided
a water body, an elevated place and other natural habitat features for
the tiger enclosure.
The tiger population of ten in Pilikula is in
fact now beyond its ‘manageable’ capacity and so the authorities are
launching an adoption drive. Efforts are also on for an exchange with
other animals from various zoological parks in the country. The breeding
of other animals, especially leopards and snakes, has also had a good
success rate at the zoo.
The chairman of the Zoo Authority of
Karnataka, M Nanjundaswamy, commended the officials of the Pilikula
Nisarga Dhama Society, which is out of the purview of the zoo authority
and therefore has to generate most of its own funding. |
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