Cheetah: World’s fastest Cat Returns to India after 70 years

0
656

Cheetah: World’s fastest cat returns to India after 70 years

 

Cheetahs are set to roam in India for the first time since they were declared officially extinct in 1952.

A group of eight cats will arrive from Namibia on the occasion of Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s birthday on Saturday.They will undergo a month-long quarantine before being released in a national park in central India.Cheetahs formerly shared jungles with other big cats like lions and tigers but disappeared 70 years ago.They are the world’s fastest land animals, capable of reaching speeds of 70 miles (113km) an hour.

This is the first time a large carnivore is being moved from one continent to another and being reintroduced in the wild.The cheetahs are making the transcontinental journey in a modified Boeing 747 passenger plane

At least 20 cheetahs are coming to India from South Africa and Namibia, home to more than a third of the world’s 7,000 cheetahs.The first batch of eight – five females and three males, aged between two and six years – will arrive from Windhoek in Namibia to the Indian city of Gwalior on Saturday.

Wildlife experts, veterinary doctors and three biologists will accompany the animals as they make the transcontinental journey in a modified passenger Boeing 747 plane.From Gwalior, the cheetahs will be transferred by helicopter to Kuno National Park in Madhya Pradesh state, where they will be released by a delegation led by Mr Modi.

A cheetah rests in a Namibia clinic after being prepared for the journey to India

Spread over a 289-square-mile area, the Kuno National Park is a sprawling sanctuary with prey like antelope and wild boars for the wild cats.

An electrified enclosure, with 10 compartments ranging in size, has been built for the animals to quarantine before being released in the wild.

Each cheetah will be given a dedicated team of volunteers, which will monitor it and keep tabs on the animal’s movement. Satellite radio collars have been put on each cheetah for their geolocation updates.

The cheetahs will be released in the Kuno National Park in central India

Experts say that a combination of hunting, habitat loss and food scarcity had led to the cheetah’s disappearance in India.

Studies show that at least 200 cheetahs were killed in India, largely by sheep and goat herders, during the colonial period.

READ MORE :  23 डॉग ब्रीड्स के इम्पोर्ट-ब्रीडिंग पर लग सकती है रोक:इनमें पिटबुल और रॉटविलर भी शामिल, केंद्र ने राज्यों को भेजा प्रस्ताव

Some of them were eliminated through bounty hunting because the cats would enter villages and kill livestock. The cheetah is the only large mammal to become extinct in the country since its independence from British rule.

India has been making efforts to reintroduce cheetahs since the 1950s. An effort in the 1970s from Iran was unsuccessful after the Shah of Iran was deposed and the negotiations stopped.

Proponents of the project say that the reintroduction of cheetahs will build up local economies and help restore ecosystems that support the big cats.

Cheetahs are the world’s fastest land animals, capable of reaching speeds of 70 miles (113km) an hour

But some worry that relocation of animals is always fraught with risks and releasing the cheetahs into a park might put them in harm’s way.

Cheetahs are delicate animals who avoid conflict, and are targeted by competing predators. And the Kuno park has a sizeable leopard population which could kill cheetah cubs.

There is also a possibility that the cheetahs can stray outside the boundaries and get killed by people or other animals.

However, officials say the fears are unfounded as cheetahs are highly adaptable animals, and claim that the shortlisted site has been fully examined for habitat, prey and potential for man-animal conflict.

A combination of hunting, habitat loss and food scarcity led to the cheetah’s disappearance in India

The first cheetah in the world to be bred in captivity was in India during the rule of Mughal emperor Jahangir.

His father, Akbar, recorded that there were 10,000 cheetahs during his time. He reigned from 1556 to 1605.

Much later, research suggested the number of cheetahs had dropped to a couple of hundred by the 19th Century – and the cat was reportedly sighted for the last time in India 70 years ago.

Cheetah Reintroduction Project – All You Need To Know

Cheetah restoration will be part of a prototype for restoring original cheetah habitats and biodiversity, assisting in the prevention of biodiversity degradation and loss.Cheetahs will be back in India on Saturday, September 17th. On his birthday, Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s ambitious plan to reintroduce the world’s fastest land animal will be unveiled. Eight cheetahs are brought to India from Namibia, 70 years after they were declared extinct in the country. They will then be released in the Kuno National Park, Madhya Pradesh.

READ MORE :  Four Newborn Tiger Cubs Die under Weight of Mother Tigress at Ranchi's Birsa Zoo

What Is The Significance Of The Cheetah Reintroduction Project? 

Cheetahs hold a special place in the national conservation ethic and ethos. Restoring the cheetah to India would have equally significant conservation implications. Cheetah restoration will be part of a prototype for restoring original cheetah habitats and biodiversity, assisting in the prevention of biodiversity degradation and loss.

Cheetahs have the lowest conflict with the human interests of any large carnivore because they pose no threat to humans and rarely attack large livestock. Bringing back a top predator restores historic evolutionary balance, which has cascading effects on various levels of the ecosystem. This will also result in better management and restoration of wildlife habitats (grasslands, scrublands, and open forest ecosystems), conservation of cheetah prey and sympatric endangered species, and a top-down effect of a large predator that enhances and maintains diversity in lower trophic levels of the ecosystems.

The primary goal of the Cheetah reintroduction project in India is to establish a viable cheetah metapopulation in India that allows the cheetah to perform its functional role as a top predator and allows for the cheetah’s expansion within its historical range, thereby contributing to global conservation efforts.

 

Why Kuno National Park Of Madhya Pradesh Has Been Selected For This Project?

 

Between 2010 and 2012, ten sites were surveyed. Kuno National Park in the state of Madhya Pradesh was considered ready for receiving cheetah with the least management interventions among the potential sites evaluated for the feasibility of establishing cheetah populations in India based on IUCN guidelines for reintroductions that consider species viability according to demography, genetics, and socio-economics of conflict and livelihoods.

Maximum Entropy Models were used to model equivalent niche space in India using cheetah presence locations from Southern Africa (South Africa, Namibia, Botswana, and Zimbabwe) along with relevant eco-climatic covariates.

The analysis shows that the cheetah’s southern African climatic niche exists in India, with Kuno National Park having a high probability of cheetah habitat suitability.

The action plan for cheetah translocations in Kuno National Park was developed in accordance with IUCN guidelines, taking into account site assessment and prey density, as well as the park’s current cheetah carrying capacity, among other factors.

While Kuno National Park currently has a carrying capacity of 21 cheetahs, once restored, the larger landscape can hold up to 36 cheetahs. The carrying capacity can be increased further by incorporating the remaining Kuno Wildlife Division (1,280 sq km) through prey restoration.

READ MORE :  No seizure of animals unless owner is convicted under PCA Act, says SC

Major Actors Of The Project – Know The Organisations Involved In The Project: 

Ministry of Environment, Forest and Climate Change (MoEF&CC) would provide financial and administrative support to the cheetah reintroduction programme in India through National Tiger Conservation Authority (NTCA). Participation of government and corporate agencies in Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) would be encouraged in order to receive additional funding at the state and federal levels.

The Wildlife Institute of India (WII), as well as national and international carnivore/cheetah experts/agencies, would provide technical and knowledge support to the programme.

Through capacity-building programmes in African cheetah conservation reserves, officials from the MoEF&CC, NTCA, WII, and state forest departments will be sensitised to ensure the success of cheetah reintroduction in India. Furthermore, African cheetah managers and biologists would be invited to train their Indian counterparts.

The Kuno National Park management will be in charge of monitoring, which is necessary for protection and management, while a cheetah research team will monitor for research.

Meet ‘Chintu Cheetah’ – Know How Local Participation Is Being Carried Out? 

Various outreach and awareness programmes will be implemented to encourage local villagers to participate. Sarpanches (village chiefs), local leaders, teachers, social workers, religious figures, and non-governmental organisations (NGOs) would be given a greater stake in conservation.

Awareness programmes are also being planned for schools, colleges, and villages to educate people about conservation and the various schemes offered by the forest department.

With a local mascot named “Chintu Cheetah,” public awareness campaigns for the local communities are underway. Madhya Pradesh’s Chief Minister, Shivraj Singh Chouhan, has directed all state officials and elected members of the state assembly from the constituencies surrounding Kuno National Park to disseminate information about the cheetah-human interface.

The cheetah reintroduction in India is being overseen by the National Tiger Conservation Authority (NTCA), Ministry of Environment, Forest and Climate Change (MoEF&CC) guided and directed by a committee of experts appointed by the Supreme Court of India in 2020.

SOURCE- https://www.bbc.com/news/world-asia-india-62899981

By: By: ABP News Bureau

IMAGE SOURCE,INDIA IN NAMIBIA

 

 

Please follow and like us:
Follow by Email
Twitter

Visit Us
Follow Me
YOUTUBE

YOUTUBE
PINTEREST
LINKEDIN

Share
INSTAGRAM
SOCIALICON