Monday, 16 August 2010

A privecy limited 'Ligers' bred in Taiwan zoo


Two baby ligers - hybrids of a lion and a tigress - are seen at Taiwan's "World Snake King Education Farm" in Kuijen, Tainan county Photo: AFP/GETTY
watches now this 'Ligers' bred in Taiwan zoo
A private zoo in Taiwan could be fined after breeding 'ligers' – a cross between a lion and a tiger.
The zoo is the island's first to breed the hybrid of a lion and a tigress, but officials seized the cubs and said they may fine the owner.
The three liger cubs were born in Taiwan on Sunday at the World Snake King Education Farm in the south, but one of them died almost immediately.

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"The pregnancy of the tigress caught me totally unprepared," said Huang Kuo-nan, the farm's owner.
"The lion and the tigress have been kept in the same cage since they were cubs more than six years ago, and nothing happened."
But the Tainan county government later in the day seized the two baby ligers, relocating them to a home for wild animals in another southern county.
"What else can I do? I respect the decision, but I hope the two cubs can be taken good care of," Mr Kuo-nan said.
He faces a fine of up to 50,000 Taiwan dollars (£1,000) for breeding wildlife without authorities' prior approval, said the Council of Agriculture.
According to the Taipei-based Apple Daily, there are only around 10 surviving ligers in the world, with adult ligers capable of growing much larger than average lions.
coppied by http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/asia/taiwan/7948783/Ligers-bred-in-Taiwan-zoo.html

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