Currently off exhibit
The six-week-old Sri Lankan leopard was touched by human hands for the first time on Monday, 18 October. The cub will receive a second vaccination at the age of about nine weeks, after which it will be immune to feline panleukopenia and cat flu. Not long after the second vaccination, the cub will be introduced to the enclosure for the first time under the watchful eye of its mother.
Europe is key to population management
Worldwide, 27 zoos keep a total of 77 Sri Lankan leopards. In Europe, there are 24 zoos with 58 leopards of this subspecies. Outside Europe, Sri Lankan leopards can also be found in the zoo of Colombo, the capital of Sri Lanka, in Singapore and Yarralumla, Australia. Clearly, Europe plays a very important role in the population management of Sri Lankan leopards.
A recent change in IUCN status
The International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) publishes the IUCN Red List of Threatened Species, which lists the status of endangered species. The status of the Sri Lankan leopard was recently changed from Endangered to Vulnerable. Despite this positive development, the Sri Lankan leopard population in the wild still faces dangerous threats such as illegal hunting and habitat destruction. However, the situation has improved slightly compared to previous years.