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Indian Express
18 hours ago
- General
- Indian Express
Month after python & 22 eggs were rescued from drain, 22 hatchlings come to life in Mumbai
Over a month after a python and its 22 eggs were rescued, 22 hatchlings have now come to life out of the 22 eggs under the supervision of a group of zoologists and animal rescuers over a period of 37 days. All the 22 hatched within a 24-hour period between Monday and Tuesday and have now been released in their natural habitat. The mother python was, however, released in its natural habitat by the group — Resqink Association of Wildlife Welfare (RAWW) — after a medical check soon after it was rescued . On May 18, while carrying out pre-monsoon desilting work in one of the drains at Mumbai's Eastern Express Highway (EEH), a group of workers appointed by the Brihanmumbai Municipal Corporation (BMC) discovered a nine-feet-long reptile curled up underneath a culvert near Kannamwar Nagar in Vikhroli (East). It did not take much time for the workers to realise that the reptile was an Indian Rock Python that was protecting its nearly two dozen eggs under its curled body. Within minutes, the workers made a distress call to the Maharashtra Forest Department, following which a three-member team came to the spot. 'We went to the spot and realised that the python was a female one and it had laid eggs recently, and therefore, we rescued it from the spot and brought it to our shelter home,' Pawan Sharma, honorary wildlife warden and president of RAWW, told The Indian Express Tuesday. Sharma said that his NGO gets rescue calls of this sort every year during the monsoon, mainly due to the waterlogging in Mumbai, due to which reptiles get washed away from their original habitat and end up in a different place entirely. 'According to the rules of the Wildlife Protection Act, we cannot keep the Python with us. Therefore, we released it in the natural habitat and our objective was to artificially hatch the eggs and make sure that all the hatchlings take birth,' Sharma said. For artificially hatching the eggs, the zoologists used a plastic container as an incubator. Chinmay Joshi, a zoologist who carried out the entire process, told The Indian Express that the container was filled with natural elements like soil, coconut husk and activated charcoal. Joshi said that no artificial ingredient was used inside the incubator and items like activated charcoal filters out the gas and coconut husk has antibacterial properties in them. 'We would monitor the temperature continuously during the entire process of incubation and would maintain an average range of 21 and 23 degrees Celsius, while the humidity would range between 65% and 80%. This temperature and humidity range would be similar if they were hatched under natural conditions,' Joshi said. When the temperature would fall below normal levels they used warm water to regulate it, he added. Joshi said that the average cycle of incubation of rock python eggs ranges between 60 and 90 days and the rescued eggs were with them for 22 days. 'The hatchlings started to come out Monday and by Tuesday, all the 22 eggs got hatched and the baby pythons were immediately released in their natural habitat,' he added. Joshi said that earlier similar methodologies have been followed to hatch eggs of several other reptiles like checkered Keelback water snakes, Montane Trinket snakes and Monitor Lizards. 'Our objective was to save as many eggs as we can. Here we have achieved a 100 per cent success rate mainly because we were able to replicate the entire natural habitat which included perfect temperature regulation as well,' Sharma said.


Hindustan Times
20-05-2025
- Hindustan Times
36 endangered reptiles seized at Mumbai airport
MUMBAI: Thirty-six endangered reptiles, including six iguanas and 30 orange-bearded dragons, were seized by Mumbai customs after they arrived on a flight from Bangkok on Sunday night. One individual, Momin Shaikh, who arrived with the reptiles, has been arrested for wildlife trafficking. Yogesh Warkad, deputy director, Wildlife Crime Control Bureau, said, 'A case has been registered under the Wildlife Protection Act. This is also a violation of CITES (Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora. We have informed the chief conservator of forests (wildlife) and other authorities.'' He added that the seizure was effected by the air intelligence unit of the Mumbai customs. The reptiles have been entrusted to Pawan Sharma of the Resqink Association of Wildlife Welfare, a volunteer rescue service. 'Some of the reptiles are not doing well but we are treating them,'' said Sharma. Warkad said the reptiles will eventually be sent back to the country of their origin.