had the cub not been handed over to the forest official could it have survived
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The rather frequent, if unscientific, practice of releasing hand-reared leopards and tigers into the wild has been sharply criticised by conservationists in a white paper, Dangers of Captive Carnivore Introductions.
The paper by filmmaker and activist Shekar Dattatri, seconded by wildlife biologists and conservationists, describes the spate of attacks on humans by leopards and tigers hand-reared as cubs and released into forests — most notably in Karnataka — and concludes that the practice is “irresponsible” and “dangerous” to both animals and human beings.
Wild cubs are routinely found in agricultural fields and handed over to the Forest Department that generally hand-rears them (often with the help of “well meaning” individuals or groups) until they are fully grown. Not infrequently the animals are released into the wild its “rightful home”.
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