National Geographic Kids USA - September 2017

(Marvins-Underground-K-12) #1
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left the bear bound to the tree.
After removing the chain from
the cub’s neck, vets from Wildlife
SOS examine him. The animal is
malnourished and exhausted. The
wound on the bear’s muzzle, which
was made by the poachers, is pain-
ful. So the rescuers immediately
give him soothing medication.
Then they place the cub in a trans-
port vehicle and drive nearly 12
hours to the Wildlife SOS Agra
Bear Rescue Facility in Agra, a
city in northern India. Once there,
a caretaker scoops up the weak cub and
carries him to his new home.

BEAR CARE
At the rescue center, staff clean the cub’s
wound so it doesn’t get infected. They also
provide him with antibiotics and pain med-
ication. After that they place the bear, now
named Elvis, in an enclosure so he can get
some rest. At first he cowers in the corner
when anyone approaches. “His bad experi-
ence has taken a severe toll on him,” says
Kartick Satyanarayan, a co-founder of
Wildlife SOS. But with some gentle coaxing,
a keeper gets the 13-pound cub to drink
some milk from a bottle.
Slowly Elvis starts to trust the keeper
who’s bottle-feeding him. And the bear
downs so much that he begins to pack on
some pounds. A few months later Elvis
starts to eat solid foods, including man-
goes, watermelons, and honey. His favorite
are eggs, which he always saves for last.
Keepers continue to give him medicine.
They hide the medicine in fruit or mix it
into his porridge.
When Elvis is a year old, he’s moved into

BY ALLYSON SHAW


a forested outdoor enclosure. No
energy, the bear scampers around
sniffs every corner of his new spa
also makes friends with the staff
who come by to say hello,” Satyan
says. But visitors have to watch th
feet—Elvis likes trying to pull off
shoes!

BIG BEAR
By about two years of
age, Elvis is 172 pounds.
He spends his days
learning to climb
trees, foraging for
yummy termites, and
munching on fruit that he
receives. Elvis was taken from his
before she could teach him sloth
vival skills, so he can’t return to t
But Elvis will have the next be
In a couple of years, the bear will
in a 160-acre, tree-filled enclosur
other sloth bears. Until then, Elvis
tinue to grow and play—and maybe he’ll
try to steal a few more shoes! “He’s grown
to be so lively and mischievous,”
Satyanarayan says.
“It’s amazing.”

© WILDLIFE SOS INDIA (ALL)

A

sloth bear cub whimpers
as he sits chained to a
tree in a remote village
near India’s Uttar Pradesh
Forest. The two-month-
old is weak, dehydrated,
and hungry. He also has a deep wound
across his snout. Poachers, who recently
snatched the bear from his jungle home
after killing his mother, stand next to
him. They plan to take the baby bear to
the nearby country of Nepal, where he’ll
be sold to people who’ll keep him at a
roadside attraction in poor conditions.
The sloth bear huddles against the tree,
his distress building.

HELP ARRIVES
As the poachers get ready to move the
cub, a conservation group called Wildlife
SOS learns of their plans. Wildlife SOS
teams up with the Uttar Pradesh Forest
and Wildlife Department and police to
raid the poachers’ hideout. They arrive
to find that the poachers have fled and

22 SEPTEMBER 2017


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