HomeNewsEnvironmentBullish on India | How cheetahs could run the long distance to 2047 in India

Bullish on India | How cheetahs could run the long distance to 2047 in India

Wildlife enthusiast Saad Bin Jung has a suggestion to improve the cheetahs' chances in India: "Let the villagers become the protectors and conservators of our immense and diverse eco-biospheres."

August 13, 2023 / 12:47 IST
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While male cheetahs are territorial, female cheetahs typically have a large home range. (Photo by Michael M via Pexels)
While male cheetahs are territorial, female cheetahs typically have a large home range. (Photo by Michael M via Pexels)

“Survival of wildlife, world over, is solely in the hands of man." Nawabzada Saad Bin Jung - a wildlife enthusiast and eco-tourism advocate who runs a wildlife resort on the banks of Kabini river in Karnataka - says this is the fundamental problem all wildlife conservationists must confront.

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"At what stage in time we drifted from being an integral part of the animal kingdom to becoming the keepers of the same, is a difficult question to answer. I fear this happened many centuries ago when we developed weapons against which the wilderness had no answers. Evolution certainly was unfair to the animal world as it gave us a lopsided advantage over the rest,” he adds.

Stories of species extinction are being told all over the world. At one stage, the tiger was in grave danger of extinction in India, till a protection act was enacted by the Indian government in the 1970s which led to the revival of the Bengal tiger in the country. But it was too late for another cat - the last Indian cheetahs are thought to have been shot in 1947 - they were declared extinct in India by 1952.