Corrections in some part of the video: 1. T3 was outside Panna for almost 1 month 2.T5 also had cubs, but none of them survived, whereas some of T4's cubs are still alive. Thank You all
25 years back, a documentary film was made on the study of male tigers of Panna by Dr. Raghu Chandawat. The documentary film was titled - Tigers of the Emerald Forest - and was broadcasted then on Animal Planet and/or National Geographic. It is such a tragedy that all the tigers in the Park went extinct almost immediately after the documentary was released. A huge tragedy. Those extinct Panna tigers definitely had some "White tiger genes" because most of them were lightly colored and the white color on their faces and underside of the bodies was very prominent and occupied much larger areas (compared to wild tigers from other parts of India).
Yes, exactly. Even though it was such a tragedy, the tiger reintroduction project has been a huge success. Even though the actual genes of the Panna tigers have become much rarer now, the number of tigers has increased significantly, contributing to the maintenance of a healthy population of tigers in the wild
Congratulations Master Rehan Chakraborty and Mahesh PD Omre for the good and simple story telling. A few incorrect facts could have been rectified or avoided. Panna is an outstanding landscape with an incredible tiger success story. 🎉❤
Corrections in some part of the video:
1. T3 was outside Panna for almost 1 month
2.T5 also had cubs, but none of them survived, whereas some of T4's cubs are still alive.
Thank You all
Your most welcome
@@TheUntamedZone wow a heart ❤️❤️❤️
Radhe radhe ❤❤❤❤❤❤❤
Really 😮😮😮😮😮
Glad to know
Thanks
My pleasure❤
25 years back, a documentary film was made on the study of male tigers of Panna by Dr. Raghu Chandawat. The documentary film was titled - Tigers of the Emerald Forest - and was broadcasted then on Animal Planet and/or National Geographic. It is such a tragedy that all the tigers in the Park went extinct almost immediately after the documentary was released.
A huge tragedy. Those extinct Panna tigers definitely had some "White tiger genes" because most of them were lightly colored and the white color on their faces and underside of the bodies was very prominent and occupied much larger areas (compared to wild tigers from other parts of India).
Yes, exactly. Even though it was such a tragedy, the tiger reintroduction project has been a huge success. Even though the actual genes of the Panna tigers have become much rarer now, the number of tigers has increased significantly, contributing to the maintenance of a healthy population of tigers in the wild
Congratulations Master Rehan Chakraborty and Mahesh PD Omre for the good and simple story telling. A few incorrect facts could have been rectified or avoided. Panna is an outstanding landscape with an incredible tiger success story. 🎉❤
Thanks a lot sir for your appreciation. I will try to rectify the errors in the video. Thank you for your support and guidance ❤ 🙏
Can We get in touch little fella?