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outside
Africat offices
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Africat
is known internationally after featuring in an award winning documentary
filmed for theDiscovery Channel.
Namibia
is home to the world's largest cheetah population. Namibia also
has approximately 7000 commercial farmers on whose farms the majority
of the country's leopards and cheetahs can be found. These large
carnivores occasionally prey upon the livestock that roam unprotected
in the veld. As a result, carnivores are often regarded as vermin
by the livestock and game-farming community and are deliberately
trapped. AfriCat has had to take on a large number of captive cats
no longer wanted by other establishments. Among the carnivores being
researched and rehabilitated by AfriCat are cheetahs and leopards.
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some
of the hundreds of Cheetahs cared for at Africat
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The
4000-hectare (10 000 acres) TUSK Cheetah Rehabilitation Camp was
completed towards the end of 1999 and stocked with game by mid 2000.
Our first cheetahs, 3 orphan sibling males, who had been with us
since they were two months old, were released into the rehabilitation
area in November 2000. These cheetahs were monitored daily and despite
having no hunting experience were successful in sustaining themselves
almost from the start with hunts that included kudu, impala, scrub
hares, hartebeest, zebra, steenbok and duiker. Sadly two of the
cheetahs died after 7 months. Tests indicated 'anthrax' as the cause
of death. The surviving cheetah has been closely monitored but hasn't
suffered any ill effects. The sad and unfortunate death of the two
does not detract from the overall goal of the project - three orphan
cheetahs had the instinct to hunt and were able to sustain themselves.
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killing
devices displayed at Africat |
On
the morning of the 9th May 2002, we introduced 4 new cheetahs into
the camp with the hope that they would achieve the same success:
with the goal being to relocate them to a game reserve or game park,
thereby giving them a second chance in the wild where they belong!
At the end of August the opportunity arose for one of the pairs
to be relocated to a 27 000 ha private game reserve in Namibia.
Since relocation, their well-being has been monitored on a regular
basis and they are doing very well. The other pair of cheetahs are
also monitored daily by radio-tracking them on foot and guests can
participate in the tracking of these rehabilitated cheetahs on our
"Cheetah Tracking Trail".
Although
hunting is instinctive in carnivores, many of the cheetahs at AfriCat
lack experience due to being orphaned or removed from the wild at
an early age. This inexperience, as well as their conditioning to
captivity, makes them unsuitable for release. The ten thousand-acre
(4000 ha) TUSK Trust Cheetah Rehabilitation Camp provides these
cheetahs with the opportunity to hone their hunting skills and become
self-sustaining and thereby giving them a chance to return to the
wild. The cheetahs are fitted with radio-collars prior to their
release into the camp so that their welfare and progress can be
closely monitored.
Once
they have proved that they can hunt for themselves and cope on their
own, they can be relocated to a private game reserve, where their
progress will continue to be monitored. Besides giving orphaned
cheetahs a chance to return to the wild, the success of this project
provides other substantial benefits. It gives us the opportunity
to assess whether rehabilitation is a successful means of conserving
an endangered population and also allows for the number of cheetahs
in captivity to be reduced.
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Paradise,
Okinjima lodge set up to assist
Africat charity to raise funds |
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