How are cheetahs faring in India?
- Recently deaths of cheetahs have been reported last week from the Kuno National Park (KNP), Madhya Pradesh.
- An expert committee charged with managing the Project Cheetah programme has recommended that all animals undergo a thorough medical review.
Project Cheetah
- Project Cheetah is India’s cheetah relocation programme and is perhaps among the most ambitious of its kind in the world.
- The attempt is to, over the next decade, bring in 5-10 animals every year until a self-sustaining population of about 35 cheetahs is established.
- Unlike cheetahs in South Africa and Namibia that are living in fenced reserves, India’s plan is to have them grow in natural, unfenced, wild conditions.
- As of today, 11 of the translocated cheetahs are in the true wild with four in specially designed one-square-kilometre enclosures called ‘bomas,’ to help the animals acclimatise to Indian conditions.
- Five of the translocated animals and three of four cubs born in India have died.
The need of Medical Review
- One of the cheetahs, nicknamed Surya, was found dead in KNP last week.
- Veterinarians examining the animal saw a wound on its neck, infected with maggots.
- The larvae of the maggots were also found on the radio-collar fitted onto the cheetah’s neck.
- There was a chance that chafing from the collar may have indirectly sickened the cheetah.
- The collars that the cheetahs wear are made from polystyrene and equipped with a radio-frequency tracking chip that helps monitor the animals.
- Coupled with the moisture from the monsoon season — something that South African cheetahs aren’t acclimatised too — the animal may have been unable to lick itself clean which allowed parasites to fatally lodge inside the wound.
- There is also a hypothesis that via the wound the African animal may have been exposed to parasites that Indian big-cats are usually resistant too.
- However, the Environment Ministry in a note on July 16 dismissed these suggestions as hearsay…in the absence of scientific evidence.
- To investigate these points, the expert committee has recommended that all surviving animals be subject to a thorough physical examination.
Success rate of Project Cheetah
- In September 2023, it will be one year since a batch of eight cheetahs from Namibia arrived in India.
- They were followed by 12 others from South Africa in February 2023. While conceived as an experiment that is susceptible to failure in the initial years, independent critics have argued that there are some basic flaws in the project.
- For one, it is a mistake to have had all 20 cheetahs in KNP as it’s too little space and prey, given that the animal is a courser and needs large distances.
- Moreover, having cheetahs for extended periods in quarantine have affected their adaptive capabilities and caused them to have psychological adjustment problems, making them more vulnerable.
- Unlike tigers and leopards, cheetahs are relatively delicate animals and are more likely to be fatally injured in the wild.
- Currently, Indian cheetahs face no competition from other comparable predators such as lions and leopards. So, it remains to be seen if the animals can successfully establish themselves in India, over time.
Way forward
- While officials say that there is enough space and prey in the Kuno reserve, there are plans to develop a second reserve in Gandhisagar, Madhya Pradesh and also establish a cheetah rehabilitation centre.