Four South African cheetahs to Bengaluru

News –
- Four South African cheetahsâtwo males and two femalesâarrived at Kempegowda International Airport in Bengaluru.
- This arrival marks the return of cheetahs to Karnataka after roughly 70 years.
Key Details of the Arrival
- Source & Exchange: The animals were sourced from South Africa’s Induna Primate and Parrot Park as part of a formal exchange programme.
- Quarantine: The cheetahs are undergoing a 30-day quarantine at the Bannerghatta Biological Park (BBP).
About
- India declared the cheetah extinct in 1952, after decades of over-hunting, habitat fragmentation, and depletion of prey species.
- The launch of Project Cheetah in 2022 and the arrival of cheetahs from Namibia and South Africa created the worldâs first intercontinental relocation programme for a large carnivore.
- Botswana – It’s a landlocked country with nearly 70% of its landmass covered by the Kalahari Desert, and holds one of the worldâs largest wild cheetah populations.
Project Cheetah
- Overview: Project Cheetah is Indiaâs ambitious attempt to reintroduce the cheetah in suitable open forest and grassland ecosystems.
- Launched By: National Tiger Conservation Authority (NTCA), a statutory body under the Wildlife (Protection) Act, 1972 (amended 2006).
- Uniqueness – It is the worldâs first intercontinental translocation of a large wild carnivore.
Translocations So Far:
- 8 cheetahs from Namibia in 2022
- 12 cheetahs from South Africa in 2023
- 8 cheetahs from Botswana (2025 announcement)
Cheetah(Acinonyx jubatus)
- It is the worldâs fastest mammal and the only large carnivore to have gone extinct in India (1952).
- Unlike other big cats, cheetahs do not roar.
- There are two main species: the African cheetah (Vulnerable) and the Asiatic cheetah (Critically Endangered), found only in eastern Iran and parts of Africa.â







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