During the last week of May, our field researchers began to observe some interesting behavior in two of
the female snow leopards in our long - term ecological study.
In 2011, she became one of the first
female snow leopards to be tracked with a GPS collar.
Using remote - sensor research cameras and GPS tracking collars, Snow Leopard Trust researchers have been able to follow and observe a young
female snow leopard named Anu over the course of four years as she grew up, dispersed from her mother and later had cubs herself twice in her mountain habitat in Mongolia's South Gobi.
These are his adventures... Two days ago, Bo and I went with Miji to visit a family whose livestock had been raided by
a female snow leopard with two cubs.
Dagina, an eight - year old
female snow leopard we've known since she was a tiny cub, becomes our latest cat to be tracked with a GPS collar in the world's most comprehensive study of wild snow leopards.
Not exact matches
This size was deemed appropriate allowing about 2 camera stations per home range [22] since the mean minimum summer and annual ranges of
snow leopards in Tost are estimated to be c. 55 km2 and 70 km2, respectively for 9 adult breeding
females using fixed Kernel estimators on 12,498 locations over a period of five years (Johansson et.
· In country capacity to conserve
snow leopards has been bolstered with the training of young
female conservationists as part of the program.
Although all
snow leopards were identified as unique individuals based on camera trap pictures, the sexing of adults would perhaps not have been possible for many individuals (except
females with young), had we not been capturing them for collaring.
The change in sex ratio of
snow leopards in Tost was accompanied by a potential decline in the number of cubs per
female over the study period as the
female population increased.
Model based inferences from a separate analysis using adult
snow leopards» data, grouped as male and
female on program Mark indicated that the detection probability did not vary between sexes.
The documentary follows a panda mother as she raises her
female cub, a
snow leopard struggling to feed and teach her two offspring, and a young male golden monkey who joins a band of outcasts following the birth of his baby sister.