HomeNewsIndiaCheetah deaths at Kuno National Park troubling but not unduly alarming: NTCA to SC

Cheetah deaths at Kuno National Park troubling but not unduly alarming: NTCA to SC

The top court had on May 18 expressed serious concern over the cheetah deaths and asked the Centre to rise above politics and consider shifting the animals, which became extinct in the country in 1947-48, to Rajasthan.

August 01, 2023 / 18:52 IST
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Some cheetahs were reported to have developed infections due to radio collars.
Some cheetahs were reported to have developed infections due to radio collars.

The Ministry of Environment and Forests and the National Tiger Conservation Authority (NTCA) have told the Supreme Court the death of five adult cheetahs and three cubs at KNP is troubling but not "unduly alarming”, and the surviving big cats are being captured and medically examined as a precautionary measure.

Under Project Cheetah, a total of 20 radio-collared animals were imported from Namibia and South Africa to the Kuno National Park (KNP) in Madhya Pradesh and later four cubs were born from Namibian cheetah ’Jwala’. Out of these 24 feline, eight including three cubs have died. Some cheetahs were reported to have developed infections due to radio collars.

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The joint affidavit, filed on behalf of the environment ministry and NTCA, said the provisional diagnosis of mortality events points towards "natural causes” and none of the cheetahs have died due to unnatural reasons such as poaching, snaring, poisoning, road hits, electrocution etc. "It is respectfully submitted that the NTCA today has no reason to believe that the mortalities were caused on account of any inherent unsuitability at the Kuno site,” it said.

The affidavit said the general scientific awareness is that being an integral part of the ecosystem, cheetahs in general have a very low survival rate of 50 per cent in adults even in non-introduced populations. Non-introduced cheetah populations are essentially native species. "In the case of introduced population the survival rates are even much lower taking other variables into account which may lead to about 10 per cent survival in cubs, and thus, mortalities (at KNP) though troubling and in need of redressal and curtailment are not unduly alarming,” it said.