This 2017 video is called Male tiger successfully raises his cubs by himself.
From Wildlife Extra:
Modern male single parent tiger bringing up cubs
The extraordinarily caring tiger
May 2012. In the sun-baked Araveli hills and lakes of Ranthambhore Tiger Reserve in Rajasthan, India, an extraordinary wild drama is being played out.
The well-known and patient tigress, Kachida, had already raised three cubs to full maturity in the park, between 2007 and 2010, putting up with her mature brood well into their adulthood. She was also a favourite to visitors and the park guards, being completely comfortable with humans in her territory.
Balendu Singh, an honorary Wildlife Warden, found Kachida in the small pool behind the Dhakara anicut in late January last year. Soon, two healthy cubs came scampering down to the water’s edge calling for their mother. Traces of blood on the mouths and paws confirmed that the cubs had eaten meat from a fresh kill, likely to have been one of their first proper meals, after coming off their mother’s milk.
Tragedy
Tragically, only two weeks later, Kachida came within 50 metres of chowki (guard post) and was heard roaring throughout the night, deeply unsettling the forest guards inside. In the cold dawn that morning, the guards found her dead body under a gum tree, after an agonizing death that night from blocked intestines.
A frantic search for the now orphaned cubs ensued. What should the authorities do? Experts stressed that her four-month-old cubs would die without support within a few days – but the cubs had other survival ideas. They feed on the small chunks of meat and water put out for them, and guards were placed on duty day and night to watch them. A zoo was always an option, and as days past when they could not be found concern mounted and everyone feared the worst.
“We feared greatly for their survival”, said Yogesh Sahu, the Deputy Field Director, in charge of the park.
Remarkable turnaround
Then two months later in May last year, a series of camera trap pictures revealed a most astonishing fact. A large male tiger was captured on camera, walking with the cubs some five kilometres from their den.
Here was their father, the dominant male of the area, out on his regular territorial walk with his own small orphaned cubs. Nothing like this had ever been recorded before. A male tiger, taking on a mother’s role – and from such a tender age.
The male tiger, known as Dollar (called because of the dollar shape stripes on his right flank), is often seen hunting and allowing his daughters to eat from his kill, not merely protecting them from other tigers, which is usually the father’s only job. Those who have been privileged enough to spot this family have seen the cubs nuzzle a sleeping father who would lift his paw and ‘pat’ the cub down near him, in the manner of a mother. Recently Dollar came out from the bush, cubs in tow patrolling his territory, spray-marking trees, rolling in the scent left by him or scalding the wrong-doings of his daughters.
The cubs are alive and well today, and history is being well and truly rewritten by this extraordinary father, after nearly a year of fatherly motherhood.
Not yet out of danger
But this does not mean the two cubs are out of danger yet. The worry is that a new female tigress, coming into his prime territory, may well alter his protective and caring behaviour towards his daughters.
Would he stop protecting them? What happens when they mature? Will a transient male kill them first?
Follow the tiger’s story
You can now follow this amazing drama on Tiger Nation with Tiger diaries, photos and videos on all the action in the wild. Dollar is just one of a number of ‘star’ wild tiger that [one] can follow on this subscription-based web platform, that uses the power of social media and participation to power a revolution in conservation.
Tiger Nation’s ‘people-powered’ approach, alongside wildlife partners and experts, aims to aid efforts to expand the area in which tigers can thrive across India.
Story told by Balendu Singh, an Honorary Wildlife Warden, and Yogesh K Sahu, the District Forest Officer of Ranthambhore National Park, Rajasthan.
May 2012. A recent preliminary assessment of 63 legally protected areas in seven tiger range countries shows that only 22, or 35%, maintain WWF’s minimum standards of protection. This indicates that the areas set up to protect tigers and other threatened species are not necessarily the refuge they are designed to be, says WWF: here.
July 2012. The Supreme Court of India has ordered an embargo on tourism in the “core zones” of India’s government-run tiger reserves. There is a further hearing on 22 August, at which Travel Operators For Tigers (TOFT) will present an argument to the Supreme Court for a review petition, allowing for the continuation of sustainable tourism in India’s National Parks and reserves: here.
I hope the cubs continue safe until they can fend for themselves
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The young tigress on the photo looked like she maybe could already catch small prey, but not big prey yet. I too hope this moving story will have a happy end 🙂
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I hope so 🙂
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Reblogged this on Ann Novek–With the Sky as the Ceiling and the Heart Outdoors.
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Guards win right to shoot poachers
INDIA: The state of Maharashtra has declared war on animal poaching by sanctioning its forest guards to shoot hunters on sight.
The drastic measure is an attempt to curb rampant attacks against tigers, elephants and other wildlife.
The state government says injuring or killing suspected poachers will no longer be considered a crime.
Forest guards should not be “booked for human rights violations when they have taken action against poachers,” Forest Minister Patangrao Kadam said on Tuesday.
http://www.morningstaronline.co.uk/news/content/view/full/119346
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