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Third orphaned cub at Madhya Pradesh`s Bandhavgarh National Park passes away
The cubs were kept in an enclosure in the field bungalow of the Forest Department after their mother was electrocuted by a poacher near the Sanjay-Dubri Tiger Reserve in January.
New Delhi: The third orphaned tiger cub who was battling for life at Madhya Pradesh`s Bandhavgarh National Park died today, three days after death of its two siblings.
The cubs were kept in an enclosure in the field bungalow of the Forest Department after their mother was electrocuted by a poacher near the Sanjay-Dubri Tiger Reserve in January.
"The first two cubs died on April 23 and the third died on April 26," a Bandhavgarh forest official told IANS.
More than 50 tigers have reportedly died in the past 20 months in Madhya Pradesh, a state known for its forests and tigers.
Wildlife activists allege negligence, exposure to humans and absence of a wildlife veterinary cadre as the main reasons behind the deaths.
Wildlife experts and activists said the tiger cubs, about five months old, died either due to `Parvovirus` or `Carbo virus`. Officials denied the allegation.
"Treatment of any animal is on the basis of symptoms... When we started the treatment, viruses didn`t appear, though samples had been sent to IVRI and Jabalpur," Mridul Pathak, field director of Bandhavgarh National Park, told IANS.
Asked about the exposure of cubs to humans, Pathak said the cubs were kept in isolation and humans do not carry viruses.
The wildlife activists, however, say the cubs were exposed to several people, including Madhya Pradesh Chief Minister Shivraj Singh Chouhan on April 19 and Railway Minister Suresh Prabhu on April 21.
(With IANS inputs)