Hand-Raising Kash
A tiger cub gets the
royal treatment.
His name is Kashtan, which means chestnut in
Russian. But they call him Kash for short. The Amur tiger cub and his three
sisters were born in September at the Milwaukee County Zoo in Wisconsin.
A month after the cubs’ birth, Kash developed
an infection, as did one of his sisters, who died. Kash was sent to the zoo’s
hospital for about two weeks. “That’s a little too long for him to be put back
with his mother,” said Katie Kuhn, area supervisor of Big Cat Country at the
zoo.
Initially, Kuhn and the other keepers were
concerned that Kash’s mother, Amba, might not allow him to be removed each day
for feedings that would keep him alive. Later, they feared that Amba would
reject Kash since he had been sick.
To keep Kash alive, the keepers hand-fed him
nutrients that his mother otherwise would have provided. Amur tigers are
endangered, so helping to keep Kash alive is particularly important.
The keepers spent 16 hours a day with Kash,
feeding him six bottles each day. He now eats horse meatballs and is able to
spend time with his surviving sisters, Eloise and Bernadette. He is learning
how to hunt and socialize. “He needs to learn when another tiger is telling him
to back off,” Kuhn said.
I asked Kuhn if Kash has a favorite toy. He
likes boat buoys, she said, “because they’re soft, and it’s like he’s killing a
prey.”
Many people might think that Kash and his
sisters look like puppies. But Kuhn says, “They’re definitely not puppies. A
bite from one of these guys, even at 4 months old, would probably send me to
the hospital.”
Will there come a time when the zookeepers
will have to stop hand-feeding Kash?
“Oh, for sure,” Kuhn said. “We’re playing it
day by day. We usually stop going in with [normal tiger cubs] when they’re
about 3 months old. Because we’ve been with Kash for so long, we still feel
comfortable going into the enclosure.”
That may not last long. “With each passing
day,” Kuhn said, “we’re definitely cutting back our presence with him.”
Would you ever want to
raise a baby tiger? Why or why not?
4 Comments:
yes why it grows up to be tuff
agustin
No. Because it is dangerous and it could eat everything in my house.
-Noah
I still don't want a tiger. I don't want it to eat me or eat my good food and I'm delicious.
Noah
Tigers are not pets! They should be Wild.
Noah
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