Six cheetahs have now died since being reintroduced into India

The Indian cheetah cubs are seen together shortly after their birth in March.
Three
cheetah cubs have died in India this week, dealing yet another setback to a
historic effort by the government to reintroduce the species to the country
after 70 years of extinction.
The cubs
were part of a litter of four born in late March to
a cheetah named Siyaya, who was one of eight rehabilitated cheetahs brought from Namibia to
India’s Kuno National Park, in the central state of Madhya Pradesh, in
September last year.
The first
cub died Tuesday morning, said JS Chauhan, chief conservator of the Forest
Department of the central Indian state of Madhya Pradesh in an interview with
local media. Over the next two days, two other cubs succumbed to “heat,
dehydration and weakness,” forest department officials said.
The fourth
cub was also rescued and taken to a local hospital for monitoring, Chauhan
said.
“Its
condition was also not very good, but after treatment, the cub is looking much
better, though the cub is underweight and a bit weak. Both the mother and her
remaining cub continue to remain under observation”, he added.
The
government did not give the cause of death, but the day they died was one of
the hottest of the season, with temperatures hitting up to 46-47 degrees
Celsius (114-116 degrees Fahrenheit).
The
latest deaths bring to six the number of cheetahs that have died since being
reintroduced into India.
Siyaya gave
birth to the cubs more than 70 years after cheetahs were declared extinct in
India. It took a multi-step journey to get her and seven other cats from
Namibia, on Africa’s southwestern coast, to central India.
Another 12
cheetahs arrived from South Africa in February.
But since
then, three adult cheetahs have died. One South African cheetah died during an
attempt at courtship and mating, a Namibian cheetah died of kidney disease, and
a South African cheetah died due to cardiac failure.
Cub
mortality is high in both the wild and captivity, according to the Smithsonian’s National Zoo.
On average, 30% of all cubs born in human care die within one month of birth,
and in Tanzania’s Serengeti National Park, about 90% die before reaching three
months of age, the zoo says.
Cheetahs
were declared extinct in India in 1952 and are the only large carnivore in the
country to have suffered that fate.
Today, the
spotted felines are most prevalent in Kenya and Tanzania in east Africa, and
Namibia and Botswana in southern Africa, according to the National Zoo. But
historically, the endangered cats had a much larger range, roaming throughout
the Middle East and central India as well as most of sub-Saharan Africa.
Habitat
loss, poaching, and conflict with humans have greatly reduced their
populations. Cheetahs are now found in only 9% of their historic range, with fewer than 7,100 adult
and adolescent cheetahs in the wild, according to the Cheetah Conservation
Fund.
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