Hindustan Times (Noida)

MP’S Kuno national park to be home to Cheetahs in 6 months

- Jayashree Nandi letters@hindustant­imes.com

Cheetahs from Namibia and South Africa are likely to reach too India in the next four to six months, and be reintroduc­ed in Kuno national park in Madhya Pradesh, Union environmen­t ministry officials have confirmed. The move comes 74 years after the last of the big cats was killed in India. The cheetah was declared extinct in the country in 1952.

“We are expecting African Cheetahs to arrive in the next 4-6 months. The Kuno national park is being prepared for reintroduc­tion,” said Gaurav Khare, official spokespers­on of the environmen­t ministry.

In the first phase, 12 to 15 cheetahs are likely to arrive later this year or early in 2022 but over the next five years 40 to 50 are likely to be reintroduc­ed, SP Yadav, member secretary at the National Tiger Conservati­on Authority (NTCA), which is overseeing the project, said.

“Experts from South Africa visited Kuno and found the habitat suitable for reintroduc­tion. In fact, they said it is better than some of their habitats in South Africa. Reintroduc­tion will take months. First, we need to see if they (the cheetahs) are able to kill prey in a very large enclosure,” explained Yadav.

Chital, chinkara and black bucks may be suitable prey for cheetahs in India, according to experts. Yadav said cheetahs don’t necessaril­y require grasslands, and that the forests of central India and parts of Rajasthan are best suited for them.

“Our understand­ing is that their habitat is varied. The last time cheetahs were seen in the wild was in the Sal forests of Chhattisga­rh,” said Yadav adding that “each Cheetah requires around 10 to 20 sq km area. They are small cats so they need a far smaller area than say a tiger. There is no record of a Cheetah attacking humans. Their prey base is mostly small ungulates (hooved mammals).”

The Internatio­nal Union for Conservati­on of Nature (IUCN) lists the Asiatic Cheetah to be critically endangered. With a historic distributi­on across southwest

and central Asia to India, the Asiatic Cheetah is now only known to occur with certainty in Iran. The population is very small, the IUCN states. Due to extremely low numbers of the Asiatic Cheetah, African Cheetahs, another subspecies are being considered for reintroduc­tion in India but the experiment has been criticised by some scientists.

“Firstly, this is not reintroduc­tion but introducti­on of African Cheetahs to India. They belong to the African continent. The Kuno Palpur sanctuary hasn’t been prepared for cheetahs which need large open areas and small catchable prey. The Chinkara group size in Kuno is very small and Chital group size is also shrinking due to loss of open grasslands. We have to be very cautious of zoonotic diseases also during this experiment. It would have been better if suitable habitat was developed before bringing them,” said Fayaz Khudsar, a wildlife biologist who conducted field research in Kuno in the late 90’s.

The SC on January 28, 2020, approved the introducti­on of the African Cheetah in India on an experiment­al basis in a carefully chosen habitat which will be closely monitored to assess if the cat can adapt to Indian conditions. NTCA approached SC regarding introducti­on of African Cheetahs to India.

The Wildlife Institute of India in collaborat­ion with the Wildlife Trust of India assessed potential sites and as long back as 2010 recommende­d Kuno Palpur Wildlife Sanctuary in Madhya Pradesh; Shahgarh landscape in Jaisalmer (Rajasthan); and Nauradehi Wildlife Sanctuary in Madhya Pradesh for introducti­on of the African Cheetah.

In 2013, SC imposed a stay on introducti­on of African Cheetahs to Kuno because it was an ideal habitat for the Asiatic Lion.

The Asiatic cheetah was driven to extinction in India and the geneticall­y very similar African cheetah which numbers about 12000 wild individual­s, was favoured as seed stock for reintroduc­tion. The Internatio­nal Union for the Conservati­on of Nature (IUCN) whose opinion was sought by the Government in this regard, approved this proposal according to a note by Wildlife Trust of India.

 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? The cheetah was declared extinct in India in 1952.
GETTY IMAGES The cheetah was declared extinct in India in 1952.

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