Have to be realistic about losses: Cheetah expert

NEW DELHI, Sept 19: The first generation of the reintroduced cheetahs in India may have to be monitored for their entire life and “success will take a lot of time” as bringing an animal back from extinction in a country is not an easy process, says Cheetah Conservation Fund (CCF) founder Dr Laurie Marker.
The cheetahs being brought from Africa are used to other predators such as leopards and lions. However, there can be losses due to the interaction between the species in India, the American zoologist and researcher told PTI in an interview.
The CCF has closely assisted Indian authorities in re-introducing cheetahs in the country. Since 2009, Marker has been to India several times to conduct site assessments and draft plans.
The cheetah expert said growing a population with natural mortality takes time.
“We are probably looking at a success potentially in 20 years or more. The numbers will be getting augmented from Namibia and South Africa, which will keep the genetics clean and growing,” she said.
Asked about the factors conservationists would be looking at to measure the success of the project, Marker said, “We look at the adaptation of these animals, their hunting and reproduction, and we are hoping that there will be more reproduction than mortality. There should be a viable population, which should be a larger number.”
“We will also be looking at other habitats for the animals to be moved into — which should be a metapopulation — and then we have to manage them. So, it is a very long and complex process,” she said.
Metapopulations are spatially separated populations of the same species which interact at some level.
Marker said she wants people in India and the world to realise that success (in such projects) is not a “quick easy thing and takes a lot of time”.
She said the cheetahs may have to be monitored for their entire life as following these animals as “the first ones on the ground” will be extremely important for research.
“We usually do that for the first generation of re-introduced animals to find out everything about them. They have been radio-collared for a certain period of time, and if allowed, we can re-collar them as well,” Marker said.
The animals have been fitted with satellite collars to enable scientists to track their movements and monitor their health status.
After their 30-day stay in the quarantine enclosure, the cheetahs would be released into a larger enclosure spanning more than six square kilometres to become familiar with their new environment, where they would remain for a month or more before being released into the national park. (PTI)
Their movements would be monitored by research teams, and if an individual cheetah strays too far afield, the animal would be brought back.
In semi-arid regions of Namibia, cheetahs utilise their huge home range of about 1,500 sqkm while the Kuno National Park (KNP) is spread over just 748 sqkm
The CCF and Indian authorities believe the cheetahs’ home range size requirements in India is likely to be “lower due to the more productive habitats”.
“We hope that they will not leave (the park). Ideally, they will stay in the area. Their home ranges are also dependent on the amount of prey that’s available to them and there is quite a bit of prey (at Kuno) and I hope the habitat is going to keep them there,” the cheetah expert said.
“This is all research, a question… It’s the first time and we cannot answer any of these things. All we can do is put the best science we have forward to be able to second-guess what these cheetahs are going to do and plan accordingly,” she added. (PTI)