Begin typing your search above and press return to search.
exit_to_app
Street violence in Bengal politics
access_time 2026-06-02T11:03:56+05:30
Hajj in the age of consumerism
access_time 2026-06-01T13:20:51+05:30
We need AI as a servant, not as a killer
access_time 2026-06-01T10:52:39+05:30
Do sports lovers know Dev Meena?
access_time 2026-05-31T09:30:23+05:30
When the Modi government develops Nicobar
access_time 2026-05-28T10:00:24+05:30
DEEP READ
exit_to_app
Homechevron_rightIndiachevron_rightMP national park...

MP national park releases last of its leopards to the wild

text_fields
bookmark_border
MP national park releases last of its leopards to the wild
cancel

Sheopur: Madhya Pradesh's Kuno Palpur National Park (KNP) has let the last of its leopard into the wild. This was the sixth leopard roaming in the large enclosure meant for cheetahs.

Kuno's Divisional Forest Officer Prakash Kumar Verma said the Wildlife Institute of India (WII) has informed as per camera traps that the last leopard came out of the enclosure on Friday. It was roaming in enclosure number six.

The enclosure was awaiting the arrival of eight cheetahs from Namibia in September under an ambitious initiative to reintroduce the fastest animal in the country. Six leopards entered the acclimatisation enclosures and five of them were evacuated. The last one left on Friday. Cheetahs haven't been released in this enclosure yet.

The cheetahs were first released to the KNP quarantine zone. Earlier this month, three cheetahs - Obaan, Alton, and Freddie - were shifted from the quarantine area to the acclimatisation enclosure.

"Obaan was released into the larger enclosure, spread over an area of 5 sq km, on November 18 while Elton and Freddie were moved to the acclimatisation enclosure on November 5. The other five cheetahs would also be shifted to the large enclosure this month, " said an official to PTI.

The group of five female and three male cheetahs is expected to repopulate the species in the country. India's last cheetah died in 1947 and was declared extinct in the region in 1952.

Show Full Article
TAGS:Madhya Pradesh National Park leopard cheetah 
Next Story