Cheetah Translocation Project: Why did three of the four cheetah cubs die? | In Focus podcast

Dr Bettina Wachter speaks to us about the death of three cubs in the Cheetah Translocation Project, and the factors that could have a bearing on the survival of cheetah cubs.

June 09, 2023 04:19 pm | Updated 04:19 pm IST

India’s ambitious cheetah relocation project got a shot in the arm when one of the translocated females gave birth to four cubs in March. These were the first cheetah cubs to be born in India since the species went extinct in the country 70 years ago. But in an unfortunate turn of events, three out of the four cubs have died, and the fourth one, also reported to be very weak, is under close medical monitoring.

The Environment Ministry in a press release has claimed that the survival rate of cheetah cubs is only 10%. Does that mean that the deaths of the three cheetah cubs were along expected lines? Shouldn’t the survival rate be higher in the absence of predators? What are the various factors that could have a bearing on the survival of cheetah cubs?

Guest: Dr Bettina Wachter, head of the Cheetah Research Project and a senior scientist at the Leibniz Institute for Zoo and Wildlife Research (Leibniz-IZW), Berlin.

Host: G. Sampath, Social Affairs Editor, The Hindu.

Edited by Jude Francis Weston.

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