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ASIATIC CHEETAHS

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http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2005-08/wcs-iic083005.php  

Public release date: 30-Aug-2005

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CONTACT: Stephen Sautner

ssautner

1-718-220-3682

John Delaney

jdelaney

1-718-220-3275

 

Wildlife Conservation Society

 

 

In Iran, camera traps reveal rare Asiatic cheetahs

Largest-known group ever photographed in Asia

NEW YORK (Aug. 29, 2005) -- Wildlife Conservation Society (WCS) scientists,

working in conjunction with Iran's Department of Environment (DOE) in an

isolated region in the Dar-e Anjir Wildlife Refuge, recently discovered that a

remote camera set out to survey wildlife had photographed an entire family of

extremely rare Asiatic cheetahs. The pictures show an adult female and her four

youngsters resting in the shade of a tree, marking the largest-known group of

these rare cats ever photographed in Asia.

Once ranging from the Red Sea to India, the Asiatic cheetah today is hanging on

by only the thinnest of threads. Fewer than 60 exist on the entire Asian

continent, mostly on Iran's arid central plateau, where WCS and Iranian

biologists have been conducting surveys of this highly endangered big cat since

2001.

 

" As a species the cheetah is still in dire straits in Iran, so it is extremely

encouraging to see an apparently healthy family in their native habitat, " said

Dr. Peter Zahler, assistant director for WCS's Asia Programs. " Images like these

give hope to conservationists that there is still time to save these magnificent

animals. "

 

Initiated by a major grant and ongoing support from the United Nations

Development Program's Global Environment Facility, WCS began its collaboration

with Iranian scientists by surveying five protected areas where cheetahs were

still thought to exist. The group found a variety of suitable habitat, but also

discovered that prey species, such as jebeer gazelle and urial sheep, were

scarce. The latest photographs hint at the gradual recovery of prey populations.

 

" Cheetahs in Iran live on a knife-edge in very marginal habitat, " said Dr Luke

Hunter, coordinator of WCS's Global Carnivore Program. " The fact that this

female has managed to raise four cubs to six months of age is extremely

encouraging. Hopefully, this indicates there are areas where the cheetah's prey

species are coming back, a goal the Iranian DOE and UNDP has been working very

hard to achieve. "

 

In the 1970s, estimates of the number of cheetahs in Iran ranged from 100 to 400

animals. But widespread poaching of cheetahs and their prey during the early

years of the 1978 revolution, along with degradation of habitat due to livestock

grazing, have pushed this important predator to the brink of extinction. Once

known as " hunting leopards, " cheetahs have played a significant historical role

in Iranian culture being trained by its emperors to hunt gazelles in ancient

times.

 

Asiatic cheetahs went extinct throughout much of the Middle East about 100 years

ago, though they occurred in Saudi Arabia until the 1950s. They vanished in

India in 1947; spotty records claim they ranged in Central Asia as far as

Kazakhstan from the 1960s through 1980s.

 

 

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