A research camera in Mongolia's Tost Mountains captures amazing footage of a wild
snow leopard mother and her three cubs!
Not exact matches
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 G
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 G
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.
In the wild of course,
snow leopards are solitary except for a short mating time and when cubs stay with their
mother till adulthood at about 2 years of age.
During the summer, two different cameras had captured photos of a group of
snow leopards — a
mother and her almost fully grown cubs.
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.
Two
snow leopard cubs learn many lessons about survival from their
mother as they prepare for life on their own.