There are three reasons to celebrate in Thai National Park after confirming that rare Bengal tigers are raising Cubs trio in protected areas.
Last year, Park Rangers found one turnip with his mother on a camera trap at Kaeng Krachan National Park, about 80 miles southwest of Bangkok.
However, it was confirmed that more videos were collected only this week from the camera damaged by last year’s heavy rain.
“This is the first time that we have recorded a tiger that breeds three cubs in a national park,” said the chief Mongkol Chaipakdee at Kaeng Krachan National Park in a statement sent to AFP on Friday.
“I was able to collect images only this week because the camera was damaged by the rain of last year.”
The camera trap video draws three turnips running in the forest while your mother is wandering.
The cats videos captured in July were issued by a national park on Wednesday on the Facebook page.
“Based on the timeline, Cubs is currently estimated to be about six months,” Montcol said.
The park later announced on social media that it will launch a contest that names three cubs.
Currently, six adult Bengal Tigers live in Kaeng Krachan National Park. UNESCO’s World Heritage Site spreads in a dense forest area along the border with Myanmar.
Witnesses for Bengal tigers are rare.
However, earlier this year, this year, another Bengal Tiger founded in Qui Buri National Park south of the capital, Bangkok. According to Thai authorities, it was the first animal witness in the park for the first time in 10 years.
Park’s chief, Atsapon Pao On, told the Bangkok post that the team was found after the team set up a wildcax trap and monitored the area.
“Bengal tigers are not only powerful predators, but also indicators of nature,” he told the post.
Thailand has one of the few breeding groups of Bengal Tigers walking around only a handful of countries, such as India, Nepal, Russia, and Bhutan.
Bengal Tigers are listed as being dangerous to the threatened (IUCN) red list threatened by hunting and wildlife trafficking.
According to IUCN, only about 4,500 people are presumed to remain today.
With the success of conservation, the number of Bengal Tiger in India and Nepal has increased in recent years.