Five weight ‘tricky’ works on a 17-stone tiger for operation

A 17-stone amur Leopard Employees of Yorkshire Wildlife Park have said that after undergoing an intermedized operation, it is recovering after undergoing a delicate operation.

Tsachuna, A 15 -year -old Amur TigerThe keeper saw that she was lame.

The head of Carnivors Bex Brown said that the team was able to identify the issue by standing Tschuna and putting his claws on the lattice.

Veterinarians Then injected TSCHUNA with a small -running general anesthetic to reduce the process. The staff said that she is now “coming back to her fickle self”.

The operation, in which less than 15 minutes was taken, included gently clipping a claw on the left paw in front of the truth to prevent the risk of infection and remove discomfort.

TSCHUNA, a 17-stone Amur Tiger, who went as a delicate operation to remove an intercourse toenail at Yorkshire Wildlife Park in Doncaster

TSCHUNA, a 17-stone Amur Tiger, who went as a delicate operation to remove an intercourse toenail at Yorkshire Wildlife Park in Doncaster ,Yorkshire wildlife park,

“Tiger anesthetics are particularly difficult, so there was a quick process to ensure that all the people involved were included, including Tschuna,” Dr. Charlotte McDonald said, Director, Director. Animals in the park.

“Tschuna is relatively back quickly and should be rapid recovery, although it is probably a bit of headache from the anesthetic.

“We are putting her in the house first to recover completely and then she will hop that she will return to her fickle self again very soon.”

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Ms. Brown said: “Any anesthetic will always be an element of the veins, it is something we always want to try and trying to escape, but trying to trim will cause her pain, she would not have allowed us to do so. It will be painful and uncomfortable for him except it.

“Also, because we do not shed them often, it was a good opportunity that she was sleeping while she was sleeping.”

Tschuna arrived in 2013 to help support the species as part of an international breeding program in the park, also known as Siberian tigers, which came close to extinction because the number declined by about 30.

She gave birth to three cubs in the park in 2015-one of them, Hectares, has become a father in the Cleveland Zoo in the US-and hopes that she would partner with a three-year-old man Altai, who reached the park earlier this year, to produce more cubs as part of the European endangered species program.

Ms. Brown said that Tschuna is a “princess”, saying: “If we present her food, she often puts food on her second claw away from the ground.”

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