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Added on the 08/07/2021 17:08:25 - Copyright : AFP EN
Footage courtesy of Sea World on Australia's Gold Cost from April 27 shows the adorable moments that 16-year-old mother bear Liya cuddled up to her newborn polar bear cub twins. The infant cubs, two males called Hudson and Nelson, are still very fragile and are suckling from their mum inside the maternity den to gain strength. The little tykes weigh just over one pound and are about 5 inches long. However, they will grow to be among the largest land animals in the world. Adult male polar bears can weigh over 1,500 pounds and reach nearly 10 feet in length.
Georgia's Zoo Atlanta is celebrating the birth of giant panda twins, the second set of twins born to mother bear Lun Lun in three years. Rough Cut (no reporter narration).
Masaya, May 1 (EFE).- Two endangered tapirs were born hours apart at the National Zoo of Nicaragua, in the department of Masaya, south of Managua, the center reported.A male and a female, still unnamed, were born at dawn on Friday and Saturday in perfect health, the director of that center, Eduardo Sacasa, told EFE.The births in captivity occurs within the framework of a project that seeks to conserve this species, endangered due to the destruction of its habitat and uncontrolled hunting, explained the expert on exotic animals. (Camera: RENEE LUCIA RAMOS). SHOT LIST: A PAIR OF ENDANGERED TAPIRS, AT THE NATIONAL ZOO, IN MASAYA, NICARAGUA.
Berlin, 9 dic (EFE/EPA).- (Camera: Clemens Bilan/Felipe Trueba)The first two pandas born in captivity at Berlin's zoo are males and have been called Meng Yuang and Meng Xiang.The pair, who still have not learned how to walk and are being closely monitored by their carers, were presented to journalists in a ceremony on Monday attended by Berlin's mayor, Michael Müller, and the Chinese ambassador to Germany, Wu Ken. FOOTAGE OF THE TWO PANDAS BEING PRESENTED AT THE BERLIN ZOO WITH REPRESENTATIVES FROM CHINA AND GERMANY.
It was a rare moment for an endangered species when Yasha, a Siberian Tiger, met his beautiful new cubs for the first time at the Tierpark Hagenbeck Zoo in Hamburg, Germany last week. Cubs Anushka, Dasha, Mischka and Vitali were born on June 15, 2017 - the first litter born at the zoo in 15 years. Their mother, Maruschka, was born at the Novosibirsk zoo in Siberia in 2011 and met the cubs' father Yasha at Hagenbeck.
Vets were hand-feeding the tiny Amur leopard baby at the Yalta Zoo, as the cub is still too young to open its eyes or even walk on four legs. Only 57 Amur leopards, which are listed as "Critically Endangered," are believed to live in the wild as of 2015. Despite the fact that Amur leopard numbers have roughly doubled since 2007, they are still the species of large felines most vulnerable to extinction.