According to a state forest department official, twenty-two Indian rock pythons have successfully hatched from eggs that were discovered last month in a drainage line in Mumbai.
The founder of RAWW (Resqink Association for Wildlife Welfare) told PTI that the eggs found during pre-monsoon maintenance work in May along the Eastern Express Highway, were recovered alongside a nine-foot-long female python.
The Maharashtra Forest Department, in collaboration with RAWW, incubated the eggs in a controlled setting, leading to the successful hatching of the young pythons.
As per Chinmay Joshi, a zoologist with RAWW, the mother python was deemed healthy and released back into the wild, while the eggs were placed under artificial incubation. The hatchlings began emerging early Monday morning.
Dabang UP Cop Rescues 12-ft Giant Python In Pratapgarh (VIDEO)Sharma noted that the baby pythons will undergo health check-ups before being released into their natural habitat.
Indian rock pythons are listed under Schedule I of the Wildlife Protection Act, granting them the highest level of legal protection in India. They are also classified as "Near Threatened" by the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN), facing threats from habitat destruction, hunting, and poaching.
You may also like
The sky raining drops above and the sea below the feet, know how to make Goa trip wonderful in monsoon
Nepal reports first death of new Covid variant
JoSAA Round 2 Seat Allotment 2025 Results To Be Announced Today At 5 PM; Here's How To Check At josaa.nic.in
TS LAWCET Results 2025 to be out today at lawcet.tgche.ac.in; check time, steps to download and more
Virat Kohli: After losing the first test, fans remembered Virat Kohli, reacting on social media..