Little corner of India re-created in Chester for endangered lions
The lion-friendly savannah at Chester Zoo is based on India’s Gir Forest region, where the last surviving wild Asiatic lions live
A pride of Asiatic lions gingerly took their first steps into their new home on Wednesday, which has been specially created at Chester Zoo to help conserve the world’s rarest species of the animal.
The 5,000 square metre area is the UK’s largest habitat for the lions, with only around 350 of the of the extinction-threatened animals left.
Once the fearsome hunters roamed across Northern Africa, Greece, Turkey and Asia but they are now confined to a single, small region of India.
Lionesses Kumari and Kiburi, along with adult male Iblis, all aged 12, have been exploring their sprawling new habitat, modelled on the Gir Forest region of India, the only place where the species still lives in the wild.
“They are truly majestic animals. This brand new habitat at the zoo – the largest in the UK – really is a fitting new home for them.”
The habitat comes complete with heated indoor dens that zoo experts hope will one day be the perfect environment for cubs and could be a major boost to the European breeding programme for the species, which is teetering on the brink of extinction in the wild.
Poaching, human-wildlife conflict, habitat loss and disease have caused a catastrophic decline in Asiatic lion populations in their natural range.
The species remains ‘endangered’ on the International Union for the Conservation of Nature’s (IUCN) Red List of threatened species – meaning it is still faced with a high chance of extinction.
The Asiatic lion habitat will open to visitors from Friday, entry is free, with normal zoo admission. Zoo tickets can be booked via www.chesterzoo.org.