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May 29, 2010

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Rare tiger gives birth to 2 cubs in China

A SIBERIAN tiger has given birth to two cubs at a northwest China zoo, bringing hope for the endangered species, zoo officials said yesterday.

The tiger gave birth to the cubs two weeks ago, said zoo worker Yang Weiguo in Xining, capital of Qinghai Province.

"It was natural breeding, a real miracle in the plateau region," said Yang, who looks after the tigers at the Qinghai-Tibet Plateau Safari Park in Xining.

He said the tiger and her cubs were all in good condition. "The cubs have not yet opened their eyes, but have a very good appetite."

Zoo workers were unable to approach the mother and her cubs for a closer look, Yang said.

Zoo workers are feeding the tiger mutton, live chickens, milk and eggs to ensure adequate lactation, he said.

The mother tiger is three and a half years old and was born at a zoo in Ningbo, east China's Zhejiang Province. The cubs' father was born at Beijing Zoo in 2000.

Park manager Liu Chuanhui said the 300-hectare safari park provides a wild habitat for the animals.

He said the cubs would not be put on public display before they were a month old. "But we have installed cameras in the tigers' pen, and visitors can watch live video of the mother and the cubs."

The Siberian tiger is a subspecies of tiger which once roamed western, central Asia and eastern Russia. It is estimated that the number of wild Siberian tigers is now between 350 and 450 worldwide.

China has around 20 wild Siberian tigers, of which 10 to 14 are in northeastern Heilongjiang Province and eight to 10 in neighboring Jilin Province.



 

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