Why so cute! Newborn cheetah cubs charm visitors at Australian zoo 

Three cheetah cubs have made their public debut at a zoo in the German city of Muenster, just over a month after they were born. 
Three cheetah cubs have made their public debut at a zoo in the German city of Muenster, just over a month after they were born. (Photo | AP)
Three cheetah cubs have made their public debut at a zoo in the German city of Muenster, just over a month after they were born. (Photo | AP)
Updated on
1 min read
Mother Isantya, who moved to Muenster from Paignton, England last year, kept a close watch on the three female cubs as they took their first steps in their outside enclosure on Friday.  (Photo | AP)
Mother Isantya, who moved to Muenster from Paignton, England last year, kept a close watch on the three female cubs as they took their first steps in their outside enclosure on Friday. (Photo | AP)
Their father Jabari, who arrived from Salzburg in 2011, already has several young.  (Photo | AP)
Their father Jabari, who arrived from Salzburg in 2011, already has several young. (Photo | AP)
Cheetah cubs are born with all the spots they'll ever have, but when they're tiny those spots are very close together. This makes their fur a darker, ash gray color. They also have a long, silvery strip of fur called a mantle that shield them from bad weather and camouflage them as they hide in the grass so predators don't see them. (Photo | AP)
Cheetah cubs are born with all the spots they'll ever have, but when they're tiny those spots are very close together. This makes their fur a darker, ash gray color. They also have a long, silvery strip of fur called a mantle that shield them from bad weather and camouflage them as they hide in the grass so predators don't see them. (Photo | AP)
The zoo in Muenster is well known for the successful cheetah breed, about 50 of the endangered animals were born in the zoo since the seventies.  (Photo | AP)
The zoo in Muenster is well known for the successful cheetah breed, about 50 of the endangered animals were born in the zoo since the seventies. (Photo | AP)

Related Stories

No stories found.

X
The New Indian Express
www.newindianexpress.com