The wild cat was trapped and "partially tranquilised" before being caged in the early morning hours. It will now undergo a range of medical tests at the Delhi Zoo, chief wildlife warden of Delhi A K Shukla said.
"It will be medically tested which is a prerequisite before such animals are released in the wild. We will check whether it is fit to be released because it may have injured himself or may have contracted some infection," Shukla told PTI.
But Delhi government decided to trap and relocate it saying it may pose threat to villagers in the vicinity. The news of its sighting had come soon after villagers in Haryana's Sohna district had thrashed a leopard to death.
Although authorities were initially considering releasing it in Uttarakhand's Rajaji National Park, that plan has been shelved as there is "zero possibility" that it has come from there.
"It is young and its family might be in Kalesar from where it has come trekking along the Yamuna. But we are in touch with authorities elsewhere also and will translocate it in the most appropriate location possibly in the next two days.
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