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  2. Pulau Tekong - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pulau_Tekong

    The Singapore Zoo worked with the Malaysian Wildlife Department's Elephant Capture and Translocation Unit to help in its plan to recapture the runaway elephants. On 10 June, all three elephants were captured and relocated back to the jungles of Johor.

  3. National Biodiversity Centre (Singapore) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/National_Biodiversity...

    The National Biodiversity Centre, in partnership with Wildlife Reserves Singapore, Nanyang Technological University, and researchers Marc Cremades and Ng Soon Chye, implemented the Hornbill Conservation Project to aid in the breeding and recovery of the Oriental pied hornbill (Anthracoceros albirostris) which had previously become extinct in ...

  4. Mela shikar - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mela_shikar

    According to S.S. Bisht, the former director of Project Elephant and senior forest service officer, "Under Section 12 of the Forest Protection Act, permission to catch elephants can only be given by the Centre for population control and scientific research. Last time such permission was given to Assam was in the ’80s".

  5. Elephant Captivity Indian Animation ‘Mangal’ Heads to Busan’s ...

    www.aol.com/entertainment/elephant-captivity...

    The film project spotlights the plight of captive elephants through animation. It follows the life of Mangal, an elephant calf captured from the wild and forced into circus life, logging work, and ...

  6. List of mammals of Singapore - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_mammals_of_Singapore

    There are currently about 65 species of mammals in Singapore. [1] Since the founding years of modern Singapore in 1819, over 90 species have been recorded, including megafauna such as tigers, leopards and sambar deer .

  7. Wildlife of Singapore - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wildlife_of_Singapore

    Singapore has roughly 80 species of mammals (out of 11 different orders) including 45 species of bats and three species of non-human primates. [9] Currently, the only introduced non-domestic mammal species in Singapore is the variable squirrel. [10] The abundance of bats however has been decreasing rapidly due to habitat loss of over 95%. [11]

  8. Khedda - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Khedda

    A khedda (or Kheddah) or the Khedda system was a stockade trap for the capture of a full herd of elephants that was used in India; other methods were also used to capture single elephants. [1] The elephants were driven into the stockade by skilled mahouts mounted on domesticated elephants.

  9. George P. Sanderson - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/George_P._Sanderson

    George Peress Sanderson (1848– 5 May 1892, Madras [1]) was a British naturalist who worked in the public works department in the princely state of Mysore.He began a system for capturing wild elephants that were destructive to agriculture so as to use them in captivity.