Story from Jam Press (Dating Leopards Zoo)
Pictured: Freddo.
It’s a match! Lovelorn leopards finally feline fine after experts hook them up on animal dating site
A pair of lovelorn cats are finally feline fine after experts hooked them up on an animal dating site.
Bosses at a Dartmoor Zoo, in Devon, have welcomed a rare female Amur leopard in the hope she will breed with another Amur leopard called Freddo.
Her arrival from Colchester Zoo, in Essex, comes after Freddo was listed on the Zoological Information Management System (ZIMS), a new platform described as a "dating site for animals".
And the pair are now getting to know one another in their very own Love Island hideaway, as reported by What's The Jam.
"We are chuffed," Andy Yeoman, of Dartmoor Zoo, said.
"Lena is fantastic and settling in nicely.
"She's quite grumbly which is a good sign she's healthy.
"Hopefully love is in the air and they will love each other.
"We have a separate annexe - like a Love Island hideaway - where Lena can get used to the smell, sight and sound of Freddo.
"But they won't be able to do any damage if they do feel aggrieved.
"So they will have separate bedrooms so they can get used to each other.
"Hopefully over time they will ingratiate themselves with each other and be on the same page."
Mainly found in border areas between Russia, China and North Korea, Amur leopards are considered to be one of the world's rarest cats, with about 200 in captivity and 100 in the wild, Dartmoor Zoo said.
Much of their native homeland is under threat from logging, forest fires, agriculture and industrial development.
Lena - who has been described by her Colchester keepers as a "big personality" - is currently in an off-show enclosure at Dartmoor Zoo after arriving from Essex.
She even travelled with a package containing her favourite scents to help her adjust to new surroundings.
Colchester Zoo’s carnivore lead Emma said: “Lena is a feisty female Amur leopard with a big person