Ethiopian Wildlife Conservation The cheetah, together with the African wild dog, is considered emblematic of Ethiopia. A conservation project for wild animals started first in 2006 after "real lack of awareness in Ethiopia about the treatment of animals". The conservation goal is to ensure the increasing populations of cheetahs and other threatened wild animals in Ethiopia. The Ethiopian Wildlife Conservation Authority has confiscated cheetah cubs from wildlife trade in Ethiopia, many of which have been rehomed by Born Free, at their wildlife sanctuary Ensessa Kotteh.
Semi-captive breeding program There is a reproduction programme for the cheetah at the Djibouti Cheetah Refuge in
Djibouti City, which first started in 2004. The Djibouti Cheetah Refuge (also known as DECAN Cheetah Refuge) was first constructed in 2002 and the initial phase was opened a year later.
Rewilding project in Arabia , the
UAE There is also a
rewilding project from the Breeding Centre for Endangered Arabian Wildlife for cheetahs breeding in wildlife parks and those in captivity in the Middle-East, such as in the Arabian Wildlife Park from
Sir Bani Yas, the
Al-Ain Zoo and
Sharjah's Arabian Wildlife Centre from the
United Arab Emirates. Asiatic cheetahs once lived in the
Arabian Peninsula until they became
regionally extinct everywhere in the wild of the Middle-East in the early 1970s. The rewilding project officially started in 2008, when four captive-born Northeast African cheetahs had been reintroduced into the wild of Sir Bani Yas Island to roam free and maintain natural balance. The cheetahs are taught to breed, to survive and feed on
sand and
mountain gazelle on their own, then their offspring would successfully learn those instincts from their parents. Cheetahs are known to be difficult to breed and therefore, the survival rate of cheetah cubs is low both in the wild and in captivity. However, the project has been successful so far. In April 2010, the first four cheetah cubs had been born on the island from a successfully rewilded Northeast African cheetah mother named 'Safira'. According to conservation team, the cubs' mother had done an impressive job in taking care of her children. The cubs are recognized to be the first wild-born cheetahs in
Arabia in 40 years. The
Al-Wabra Wildlife Preservation (AWWP) from
Qatar, Al-Dhaid Wildlife Centre from
Sharjah, the Nakelee Wildlife Centre and the Wadi Al-Safa Wildlife Centre from
Dubai are also part of the international breeding programme to help save the rare cheetah population which are breeding in captivity. The breeding programmes of the Middle-East are aiming to release the cheetah into the wild of Africa. There are currently 23 adults and 7 cubs in Wadi Al-Safa.
In captivity There are breeding programs from
Europe and the
Middle East for the cheetah, such as the
European Endangered Species Programme (EEP) which is reserved for
European Association of Zoos and Aquaria (EAZA). The breeding programs have been successful. The captive breeding projects for the Northeast African cheetah first started in the Middle East, after several years of populations of cheetahs decreasing due to cubs being used for commercial purposes. The first captive breeding projects for the Northeast African cheetah started in Sheikh Butti Al-Maktoum's Wildlife Centre in early 1994, then followed by the Sharjah's Arabian Breeding Centre in late 2002 and Wadi Al Safa Wildlife Centre in 2003, until captive-bred Northeast African cheetahs from the Middle East were sent to two European zoos, Zoo Landau and Beekse Bergen Safari Park. La Palmyre Zoo would receive the cheetahs 6 months later as well.
Tamed cheetahs Both continents of Africa and Asia had 100,000 cheetahs in the 19th century. Cheetahs were once numerous in north, central and in the
Horn of Africa. They ranged in Egypt and Libya in northern Africa, from Somalia to Niger in northeastern and central Africa. The
Ancient Egyptians often kept tamed (not truly domesticated) cheetahs and raised them as pets, and also trained them for hunting alongside humans. Tamed cheetahs were taken to open hunting fields in low-sided carts or by horseback, hooded and blindfolded, and kept on leashes. When the prey was near enough, the cheetahs would be released to go after it. This was the Egyptian tradition that was later passed on to the ancient
Persians and brought to India, where the practice with Asiatic cheetahs was continued by Indian princes into the 12th century. ==See also==