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US zoo requests transfer of Siberian tiger from Moscow zoo

The Moscow Zoo has been successfully breeding Siberian tigers and transferring them to zoos around the world

WASHINGTON, March 29. /TASS/. The Henry Doorly Zoo & Aquarium, located in the US city of Omaha, Nebraska, has requested the US Fish and Wildlife Service to provide a permit for transfer of a Siberian tiger from the Moscow zoo, a notice published by the US Federal Register website informs.

"The applicant requests a permit to import one live captive-bred male Siberian tiger (Panthera tigris altaica) from Moscow Zoo, Moscow, Russian Federation, for the purpose of enhancing the propagation or survival of the species," the notice reads.

The Moscow Zoo has been successfully breeding Siberian tigers and transferring them to zoos around the world. In 2017, tiger Umar, who now goes by Martin, found a new home in a zoo in the US city of Denver, Colorado. The tiger then found a mate in his new zoo.

Siberian tigers, also called Amur tigers, live primarily in Russia’s Primorsky and Khabarovsk Regions. These tigers are included in the Red List of Endangered Species. As of today, some 480-540 Amur tigers reportedly live in the wild.