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Clouded leopards born at National Zoo Conservation Research Center |
An endangered clouded leopard at the
Smithsonian’s National Zoo’s
Conservation & Research Center (CRC)
in Front Royal, Va., gave birth to a
genetically valuable litter of two cubs
on Tuesday, March 24. The clouded
leopard, two-and-a-half year-old “Jao
Chu,” has been on a pregnancy watch for
five days, and started giving birth to
the litter early Tuesday morning.
This is Jao Chu’s first litter of cubs.
Jao Chu and the cubs’ father,
two-and-a-half year-old “Hannibal,” were
born in Thailand in a collaborative
research program with the Zoological
Park Organization of Thailand. The cubs’
sex will not be known until the first
veterinary exam.
Due to deforestation and hunting,
clouded leopards are vulnerable to
extinction. National Zoo scientist Dr.
JoGayle Howard and her team are
aggressively working toward saving this
species from decline. The Zoo has been
working with clouded leopards at the
Conservation & Research Center
since 1978, with the ultimate goal of
breeding these cats to create a
genetically diverse population. In the
past 30 years, more than 70 clouded
leopards have been born at the zoo’s
research facility in Virginia, with the
last set of cubs born in 1993.
Breeding clouded leopards in captivity
has been a challenge, primarily due to
male aggression, decreased breeding
activity between paired animals, and
high cub mortality. In 2002, the
National Zoo in collaboration with the
Nashville Zoo and the Clouded Leopard
Species Survival Plan (SSP) created the
Thailand Clouded Leopard Consortium —
the largest population of confiscated
clouded leopards in Southeast Asia. The
Clouded Leopard SSP oversees clouded
leopard populations in zoos worldwide,
and makes recommendations for potential
pairs based on the genetics and pedigree
of each cat. Since Thailand’s cubs are
only one or two generations removed from
the wild, their genes are especially
valuable.
To date, the Thailand Clouded Leopard
Consortium has produced 32 surviving
cubs. The National Zoo’s program at the
Front Royal facility is the only one of
its kind combining breeding with
scientific research. For example,
scientists still do not know why male
clouded leopards attack their possible
mates, but several graduate students at
the National Zoo are studying the males’
behavior in hopes of identifying clues.
One of the students plans to test
anti-anxiety drugs used in humans and
domestic cats in an attempt to suppress
male aggression.
Howard and her team have learned how to
reduce the risk of fatal attacks by
hand-rearing cubs for socialization and
also introducing males to their mates
when they are six months old, allowing
the pair to grow up together. Hannibal
and Jao Chu, the only compatible pair of
clouded leopards at CRC, are proof that
these techniques work. The new cubs
also will be handreared by experienced
CRC staff.
Following mating, the gestation period
for clouded leopards is about 86 to 93
days. The average litter size for
clouded leopards is two to five cubs.
Clouded leopard cubs weigh about a half
a pound when born.
Clouded leopards are little known, very
beautiful cats native to Southeast Asia
and parts of China in a habitat that
ranges from dense tropical evergreen
forests to drier forests if there is
suitable prey.
They are the smallest of the big cats,
weighing just 30 to 50 pounds and
measuring about five feet long. Their
short legs, oversized paws, and long
tail (accounts for half their length)
help them balance on small branches, and
their flexible ankles allow them to run
down trees headfirst.
The newborn cubs will not be on public
exhibit at CRC. However, visitors may
get an up-close treetop view of two
clouded leopards—a male named Tai and a
female named Mook—at Asia Trail at the
National Zoo’s Rock Creek campus in
Washington DC.
53 photos, 3 videos | 12,831 views
items are from between 15 Mar 2009 & 29 Jul 2009.