South Africa is sending cheetahs to India and Mozambique

8″ September “2022”SOURCE: NEWS AGENCIES

South Africa is flying cheetahs to India and Mozambique as part of ambitious efforts to reintroduce the distinctively spotted cats in regions where their population has dwindled.

Four cheetahs captured at reserves in South Africa have been flown to Mozambique this week after being held in quarantine for about a month and cleared for travel. Conservationists are preparing to fly 12 more cheetahs, reputed to be the world’s fastest land mammals, to India in October

Speaking to The Associated Press shortly after those going to Mozambique were tranquilised and placed into crates, wildlife veterinarian Andy Frasier said the relocations are tough for the animals.

“It’s a very stressful process for the cats to be in a boma [livestock enclosure] environment because they have nowhere to go whilst we are darting them,” said Frasier of shooting the cats with darts of tranquilisers.

“We need to use our drug doses very carefully and make sure that we give them enough drugs to anaesthetise them safely,” he said.

South Africa will send an additional 12 cheetahs to India in October, he said.

“They have woken up nicely in their crates and they are all relaxed enough that we are happy for them to leave in their transport,” he said

“For a genetically viable population in India in the long-term you need at least 500 individuals, so every year we will send eight to 12 animals, to top them up, to increase numbers, to bring in new genetics until they have a viable population,” said van der Merwe.

Indian officials say the move will aid global cheetah conservation efforts since their range in Africa is limited. The plan is for the cats to be kept in large enclosures in central Indian forests, protected from other predators like leopards or bears, to give them time to get used to their new home. The enclosures have prey — like deer and antelope — which scientists hope the cheetahs will hunt. After a few months of close monitoring, the cheetahs will be radio-collared and released.

The southern African countries of South Africa, Zambia, Namibia and Zimbabwe still have significant cheetah populations and are expected to play a significant role in their reintroduction in India following the first shipments this year.

South Africa’s cheetah population is expanding at a rate of about 8 percent annually, allowing the country to move about 30 of the cats to other game reserves within South Africa and to export some to other countries, van der Merwe said.

Conservationists have said Mozambique’s Zambezi River Delta had a significant cheetah population that has been drastically reduced by rampant poachin犀利士 g and because lions and leopards preyed upon the smaller cats

In this week’s operation, the two male and two female adult cheetahs were tranquillised in South Africa’s northern Limpopo province and then were flown to Mozambique’s Marromeu National Reserve in the Zambezi Delta region

SOURCE: NEWS AGENCIES

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