Big Cats photograph

Big Cats

Use attributes for filter !
Official site bigcatsbeats.com
AlbumsFor My Mother
SongsSongsCool, I'm DeadMost Days · 2017 31 PlanesLesser Lights · 2019 What If It Doesn't Get Better?What If It Doesn't Get Better? · 2016 View 25+ more
ListCool, I'm DeadMost Days · 2017
Reviews www.imdb.com
Cast Bertie Carvel
EpisodesEpisodesE03 · Episode 3Jan 25, 2018 E02 · Episode 2Jan 18, 2018 E01 · Episode 1Jan 11, 2018
Date of Reg.
Date of Upd.
ID3214665
Send edit request

About Big Cats


Follow along as this documentary series uncovers the secret lives of big cats, equipped with the latest technologies and scientific research to quite literally draw them out of the shadows. From the iconic lion, cheetah, leopard and tiger, to the lesser-known - but just as menacing, in their own ways - serval, ocelot and even Pallas's cat, a breed that thrive in the remote grasslands of the Mongolian steppe - this series delves deeper than ever before into the elusive world of these majestic animals. … MORE

German crime family member issues plea for missing lion

German crime family member issues plea for missing lion
Jul 21,2023 7:11 am

... It is not the first time he has been linked to Big Cats...

Kuno cheetah deaths: Could radio collars be killing the big cats in India?

Kuno cheetah deaths: Could radio collars be killing the big cats in India?
Jul 19,2023 10:30 pm

...By Geeta PandeyBBC News, DelhiCould radio collars, the crucial electronic devices that help track the movement of protected animals, be harmful for them? That is the question many are asking after the deaths last week of two cheetahs who were among the 20 Big Cats brought to India with much fanfare last year...

First cheetah cubs born in India since extinction 70 years ago

First cheetah cubs born in India since extinction 70 years ago
Mar 29,2023 12:41 pm

... The country has been trying to reintroduce the Big Cats for decades, and last year brought eight cheetahs over from Namibia as part of the plan...

Egypt zoo overhaul plan raises animal welfare fears

Egypt zoo overhaul plan raises animal welfare fears
Jan 22,2023 9:41 pm

... While many have longed for an expensive modernisation, the fear is that the new plans will overlook poorer Egyptians and the huge variety of animals - from Big Cats to desert rats - in desperate need of better care...

Tiger that killed nine people in India shot dead

Tiger that killed nine people in India shot dead
Oct 9,2022 11:50 am

... That has forced some Big Cats to turn to human-dominated landscapes for survival, which leads to livestock, and sometimes people being killed...

Cheetah: World's fastest cat returns to India after 70 years

Cheetah: World's fastest cat returns to India after 70 years
Sep 16,2022 10:01 pm

... Cheetahs formerly shared jungles with other Big Cats like lions and tigers but disappeared 70 years ago...

Extinction: Why scientists are freezing threatened species in 'biobanks'

Extinction: Why scientists are freezing threatened species in 'biobanks'
May 19,2022 7:20 pm

... " Jaguars are not the most critically endangered Big Cats, but they re in decline and they re facing the same human pressures as other big predators, " says Gabby...

Ukraine: India doctor stranded with a jaguar and panther

Ukraine: India doctor stranded with a jaguar and panther
Mar 7,2022 2:29 pm

...For more than a week, an Indian doctor in war-torn Ukraine has been holed up in a basement at home with his pet Big Cats - a black panther and a jaguar...

Extinction: Why scientists are freezing threatened species in 'biobanks'

Mar 7,2022 2:29 pm

" He's gone, " murmurs Chester Zoo vet Gabby Drake - holding a stethoscope to the feathered chest of a 28-year-old, bright red tropical parrot.

The Bird is a chattering lory - an elderly resident at Chester Zoo , and a Species listed by The International Union for the Conservation of Nature (IUCN) as vulnerable to extinction.

It is sad to see this striking, characterful bird having to be put to sleep. His small, clawed feet Are gnarled with arthritis now too severe to treat.

It is not The End though for the unique genetic code contained in his cells. A few small pieces of his body will join samples taken from 100 Species . They will be Frozen - stored indefinitely - in the UK's largest biobank of living tissue,

In vials of a nutrient-rich, cell-friendly antifreeze, The Samples Are kept at -196C, at which point all The Natural chemical processes in cells Stop - They Are suspended in animation.

The idea is that, at some point in The Future - in decades, perhaps even centuries, They could be resurrected. This is a Frozen backstop in case of extinction.

Life Begins again

Conservationists say we're now losing Species faster than ever. Amid a biodiversity crisis that, the UN estimates, threatens one million Species of plants and animals with extinction, some scientists Are now working out what to put in the freezer for The Future .

" It's not going to Stop extinction, but it'll certainly help, " says Tullis Matson, founder of Nature's Safe.

Tullis is a tall, friendly and outspoken enthusiast for his charity's Mission - preserving living tissue from Wild Animals .

" This is where Life Begins again, " he beams, showing me an image of a vial of cheetah skin cells under the microscope.

The Monitor is teeming with densely packed skin cells - a body's building blocks. The Black dot in The Middle of each spiky, connected cell is a nucleus containing a unique set of genetic instructions that made, in this case, a now deceased cheetah.

" This animal died in 2019, " Tullis explains. " We woke up those cells a few days Ago - and you can see now, They 're all over the screen. They 've multiplied and multiplied. "

 Skin cells Are very good for this endeavour, particularly a type of connective tissue cell called a fibroblast. These Are critical to healing and repair and - After being removed from the freezer and warmed to body temperature in a bath of necessary nutrients - will divide and multiply beautifully in a dish.

One of the possible Future uses for these cells is cloning new animals, using these defrosted packages of DNA.

Cloning animals is not new. It was 1996 when scientists in Scotland cloned Dolly The Sheep - fusing a cell from one ewe with The Egg of another. It is reproductive technology, born in The Realm of domestic animals and now being channelled into conservation.

US biotechnology company recently produced a Clone using skin cells from an endangered black-footed Ferret that had been dead for decades. Its eggs were Frozen in 1988.

Fusing a Ferret fibroblast with an egg cell made an embryo, and a Clone - Elizabeth Ann The Black -footed Ferret - was born in December of 2020.

They used same basic approach to Clone a Przewalski's Horse - a Species considered The Last living truly " wild" horses at a cost of $60,000 (about £48,000). The Clone , named.

" It was actually cheaper for The Zoo to Clone a Horse - to bring more genetic diversity into The American population of the Species - than it would have been to ship a Horse from a European zoo, " explains Revive and Restore's lead scientist Dr Ben Novak.

What Species should we freeze?

Genetic diversity is important. As the population of a Species dwindles, it can lead to inbreeding. In mammals, offspring have a set of genetic instructions from each biological parent. And if those parents Are related, any genetic diseases They have Are much more likely to be passed on.

Banking cells though is not about the cheapest way to resurrect genes, says Dr Novak.

" Conservationists Are fighting to save Species , but we've been unable to save Everything - the destruction is ongoing.

" Getting Out ahead and getting things in The Bank gives us the opportunity in The Future to do restoration, " he says. " If we don't do this, we'll regret it later. "

There could be a danger that biobanking sends The Message that we don't need to worry about saving Species now " because we can freeze them for later, " points out Prof Bill Sutherland , a conservation biologist from the University of Cambridge.

" And there's the issue of prioritising what is stored, " he says. " It would be wonderful to get tissue from 20 snow leopards from 20 different locations, but that would be really difficult. "

Instead, Nature's Safe works closely with zoos in Europe - particularly.

Whenever an animal has to be put to sleep or dies unexpectedly, zoo vets will take some tissue for The Bank .

" It's a ray of light, " says Tullis. " That animal dying actually gives a bit of hope for The Future of that Species , because we can freeze those genetics. "

While banking what is available is not a perfect approach, it has provided Nature's Safe with samples from Species including The Mountain chicken Frog - a critically endangered amphibian almost been wiped out by a fungal disease. And it has tissue from a Javan green magpie, a bird driven to the very brink of extinction by demand from the Wild Bird trade. (The Almost garishly Beautiful Birds have remarkable, and highly sought After mimicry skills).

Head of science at Chester Zoo , Dr Sue Walker says it's about saving as much genetic material as possible. " If we don't do it when that animal passes way, we've just lost it, " she says.

Earlier this year at Chester, Goshi, a nine-year-old female jaguar, was found dead in her enclosure. Vet Gabby Drake carefully snipped off the Big Cat 's left Ear , put it in cold packaging and posted it to Nature's Safe, before sending Goshi for a Post Mortem .

" Jaguars Are not The Most critically endangered Big Cats , but They 're in decline and They 're facing the same human pressures as other big predators, " says Gabby.

" She was quite a young animal and she never had any cubs, unfortunately. It's sad, but it's nice to know that her living tissue will carry on. "

Now, a few pea-sized pieces of Goshi's black, velvety Ear - cleaned, prepared and bathed in a protective nutrient Solution - Are in an increasingly biodiverse canister of liquid nitrogen.

Tullis is optimistic about what science might be possible in The Future . " With gene editing technology, we might even be able to create new genetic diversity, " he speculates.

Looking at the now solo male jaguar patrolling his enclosure, Chester Zoo 's Dr Sue Walker says it might be " decades until we have the technology to do what we want to do with these samples".

Her hope, and The Hope of most conservationists, is that using Frozen cells from long-dead animals will never be necessary.

" But if we don't collect it, then those genetics Are lost forever, " she says. " We've lost All That unique biodiversity. "

Hear more from Victoria 's investigation into biobanking on

Follow Victoria



Source of news: bbc.com

Big Cats Photos

Next Profile ❯