- Title: Cheetah cubs threatened by global warming and pet trade
- Date: 9th December 2021
- Summary: HARIRAD, SOMALILAND (FILE - NOVEMBER 13, 2021) (REUTERS) RESCUED CHEETAH CUBS BEING HELD ON LEASH CHEETAH CUB STANDING VET INJECTING FLUIDS INTO CUB VET TAKING HAIR SAMPLE FROM CUB ONE OF THE CUBS RUNNING OFF AS OTHER CUB IS PLACED INSIDE A CAGE CUB INSIDE CAGE VEHICLE DRIVING AWAY, TRANSPORTING CAGE HARIRAD, SOMALILAND (FILE - NOVEMBER 13, 2021) (REUTERS) (MUTE) VARIOUS DRONE FOOTAGE OF VEHICLES DRIVING CUBS THROUGH DRY AND DUSTY LANDSCAPE HARGEISA, SOMALILAND (FILE - NOVEMBER 14, 2021) (REUTERS) (MUTE) DRONE FOOTAGE OF HARGEISA AS SUN SETS HARGEISA, SOMALILAND (FILE - NOVEMBER 15, 2021) (REUTERS) VET AT CCF (CHEETAH CONSERVATION FUND), DR. ANAHI GABRIELA HIDALGO CORDERO, CHECKING THE CUBS (SOUNDBITE) (English) VETERINARIAN, DR. ANAHI GABRIELA HIDALGO CORDERO, SAYING: "The two cubs in the back are males, they are approximately five to six months old. They came in poorly conditions. They were really dehydrated, they were with diarrhea. As you can see their sizes are really small for the age that they have. They should be (SHE POINTS) this size." TWO CUBS IN CAGE ANIMAL CARE MANAGER FOR CCF, STEPHANE JOACHIM-NATT, PREPARING FOOD FOR CUBS JOACHIM-NATT PLACING MEAT IN DISH T (SOUNDBITE) (English) ANIMAL CARE MANAGER, STEPHANE JOACHIM-NATT, SAYING: (SOUNDBITE DURING SHOT 14) "The amount of food is based on the cat's weight and age and then we add vitamins to it as well. So it has calcium and other needed vitamins." JOACHIM-NATT CARRYING FOOD TO CAGE CUBS EATING / JOACHIM-NATT MOVING ONE OF CUBS TO OTHER BOWL
- Embargoed: 23rd December 2021 17:15
- Keywords: Cheetahs Somalia conservation droughts pet trade
- Location: HARIRAD AND HARGEISA, SOMALILAND / OTJIWARONGO, NAMIBIA
- City: HARIRAD AND HARGEISA, SOMALILAND / OTJIWARONGO, NAMIBIA
- Country: Somalia
- Topics: Africa,Environment,Nature/Wildlife
- Reuters ID: LVA001F7GEUYV
- Aspect Ratio: 16:9
- Story Text: Two starving cheetah cubs squeak and tug at their leashes in the white dust of Somaliland as a government vet tries to inject them with nutrients.
Just around five months old, the baby cheetahs are dehydrated, stunted and so lacking in the calcium they would normally get from their mother's milk that they have problems walking. But at least they are alive.
The Cheetah Conservation Fund (CCF) and the government of Somaliland - which broke away from Somalia in 1991 - have been rescuing trafficked cheetah cubs in the region for the past four years.
Only around 6,700 adult cheetahs are left in the wild, and the population is still declining, according to the International Union for Conservation of Nature.
Kidnapped cubs are often destined for the exotic pet trade in the Middle East but few people realise the suffering that entails. Four or five cheetah cubs die for each one that reaches the market, Dr. Laurie Marker, the head of CCF, said. Mothers are often killed.
Droughts exacerbated by global warming are increasing pressure on the cheetahs, she said, as less grazing supports fewer herds of wild prey and farm animals. Farmers who once shrugged it off when a cheetah attacked one of their animals are now less able to shoulder losses, she said.
Somaliland is planning to open a national park where the cheetahs will be able to roam, Environmental Minister Shukri Ismail Haji, said.
But although the tiny breakaway region lies in the band most affected by climate change, it cannot access most environmental funding because hardly any world bodies recognise it as a separate country from Somalia, the minister said.
(Production: Musawi Cabdalle, Nazanine Moshiri) - Copyright Holder: FILE REUTERS (CAN SELL)
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