The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Rare births for cheetah cubs

Pair being raised by humans after surviving cesarean.

- By Brett Zongker Associated Press

WASHINGTON — Two cheetah cubs have a new home at the Smithsonia­n’s National Zoo and are being raised by human hands after a risky birth last month at the Smithsonia­n Conservati­on Biology Institute in Virginia.

The zoo offered a first look at the now healthy cubs Wednesday and hopes to place them on view to the public in the cheetah yard by the end of the summer.

Cheetahs are the fastest animals on land, but scientists said every surviving cub is critical to sustaining the species, which is threatened with extinction in the wild. These cubs are geneticall­y valuable because their mother and father were first-time parents.

When the cubs’ mother, 5-year-old Ally, gave birth to the first cub in late April, though, problems quickly developed. Ally abandoned her first cub and left him in the cold on a snowy day. Then her labor stopped, even though she had three more cubs waiting to be born.

Zoo veterinari­ans performed a “rare and risky” emergency cesarean section and saved one more cub, along with the cheetah mother. Two other cubs died.

“You’re always sad that you couldn’t save them all,” said veterinari­an Copper Aitken-palmer. “But I’m thrilled that we have two, and I’m thrilled that the mom is doing well, too.”

The month-old cubs don’t have names yet, but their fuzzy hair already has spots identifyin­g them as cheetahs.

There’s one male and one female, and they’re growing fast. At feeding time, they are eager to get their bottles, clawing and chirping to get milk from their handlers. The cubs also are beginning to transition to solid foods as their teeth come in, dining on moist grocery store cat food to start.

“Because they’re cubs, everything is kind of exaggerate­d,” Aitken-palmer. “So they have really long legs, really poufy hair on their heads. But they’re pretty cute.”

Zoo veterinari­ans only knew of two other Csections performed on a cheetah before they tried it to save this cheetah family. One had been successful, and the cubs died in another case.

“It’s very rare and it’s very risky,” said cheetah biologist Adrienne Crosier. “We were certainly concerned about the welfare of the mother.”

 ?? JACQUELYN MARTIN / AP ?? One of two cheetah cubs is held by keeper Gil Myers Wednesday at the National Zoo in Washington.
JACQUELYN MARTIN / AP One of two cheetah cubs is held by keeper Gil Myers Wednesday at the National Zoo in Washington.

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