HomeNewsEnvironmentOne year of Project Cheetah: Comparisons with Project Tiger flawed and unhelpful

One year of Project Cheetah: Comparisons with Project Tiger flawed and unhelpful

An influx of eight more Namibian cheetahs into Kuno National Park is expected this month, as part of the multi-year project to relocate the cheetah in India after 70 years.

September 17, 2023 / 17:55 IST
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Experts say they knew at the outset that cheetah relocation into a habitat that had not hosted these big cats in 70 years was going to be challenging. (Photo by by Michael M via Pexels)
Experts say they knew at the outset that cheetah relocation into a habitat that had not hosted these big cats in 70 years was going to be challenging. (Photo by by Michael M via Pexels)

A year after cheetahs were reintroduced in Madhya Pradesh's Kuno National Park, there is debate over how well Project Cheetah is going. Between March 27 and August 2 this year, nine cheetahs, including three cubs, died for a variety of reasons from extreme weather to parasitic infection. Experts have since come out to explain that the deaths of cheetahs in an Indian wildlife reserve were expected because of translocation and the time wild cats take to adapt from their traditional habitats in Africa. In fact, experts are still holding out hope for a successful relocation, and there is going to be an influx of eight more Namibian cheetahs - three male and five female adult cheetahs, all between two years and five-and-a-half years old - into Kuno National Park. The cheetahs making the 11-hour transcontinental journey from Namibia to India are likely to be welcomed by PM Narendra Modi on September 17, 2023, his 73rd birthday.

“There is no need for an alarm (over cheetah deaths). This is not a true statement (that almost all cheetahs have died). Why would anyone say this?” Dr Laurie Marker, executive director of the Cheetah Conservation Fund (CCF), told Moneycontrol in an email interaction from Otjiwarongo, Namibia. The CCF is celebrating the first anniversary of Project Cheetah. "The anniversary of cheetah's return to India is a celebration of boundless possibilities that emerge when humans unite for nature," said Dr Marker. She, however, admitted the initial year of the historic reintroduction of cheetahs in India has been marked by setbacks.

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The CCF has offered advice and new strategies to help ensure the successful reintegration of the latest batch of these majestic creatures into their natural habitat in India, Dr Marker added.

Recent media reports in India said a large number of wild cats have died. The Indian government has drawn flak from some wildlife experts and also members of the Opposition Congress party. Former environment minister Jairam Ramesh blamed the programme for lacking what he called science and transparency.