Encouraged by the success of 2003, the
Padmaja Naidu Himalayan Zoological Park (PNHZP) authority
of Darjeeling is planning to release more two more red pandas
in the wild.
The PNHZP takes care of animals who live on the higher altitudes.
The zoo is the only one in India to achieve success in captive
breeding of endangered Himalayan species.
The Red Panda is a highly endangered Himalayan animal for
which the Darjeeling zoo has started a captive breeding programme.
The presence of red panda, Tibetan wolf, snow leopard and
Siberian tiger have put put the lives of pheasants in danger.
Most of the Himalayan pheasants are considered as endangered
species.
The initiative of the PNHZP authorities is not new. In 2003,
the zoo authorities had released four female red pandas in
the Singalila National Park. “With an aim to increase
the population of endangered species, we had started the plan
to release them in the wild. Our first project was successful.
We had monitored the pandas for one year through radio collar.
Among the four female pandas, one had given birth also. Now
we cannot track them because the radio callers have stopped
functioning. Owing to the success of the 2003 project, we
are planning to release two more male red pandas in the wild,”
the director of the PNHZP, Mr AK Jha said.
“It is a lengthy process to release the captive animals
in the wild. We have to train the animals, so that they can
survive. If everything occurs according to plans, then we
release the animals, he added. According to official report,
there are 14 red pandas in the Darjeeling zoo.