Instagram – Dec 04, 2020 @ 16:02

Today is International Cheetah Day. There are around 7000 left in the wild, making cheetah the most endangered big cat on the continent, and they are hugely at threat from human-wildlife conflict as their territories are reduced. ⁣⁣
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@biglifeafrica ‘s Predator Compensation Fund works to reimburse farmers who lose livestock as a result of predators, on the proviso that none are killed in return. Lions are the most common, but increasingly this is happening with cheetah too. ⁣⁣
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Read on for more about their work and how we can make a difference… ⁣⁣

Posted @withregram • @biglifeafrica ⁠
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Cheetah face a number of challenges. Habitat loss is a huge threat to all wildlife species in East Africa but particularly for cheetah who require larger hunting territories than other species. Shrinking habitat also means they come into conflict with people. Particularly in the Amboseli ecosystem, where pastoralism is a key way of life, cheetah are notorious for capturing livestock as easy prey. ⁠

In the third quarter of 2020, Big Life compensated local livestock owners US $26,569 for the loss of 51 cows, 666 sheep/goats, and 3 donkeys, and cheetah were responsible for 64 of those kills. ⁠

Our Predator Compensation Fund (PCF) works by compensating livestock owners a portion of the value of their livestock lost to predators on the condition that no predators are killed in retaliation. We usually talk about it in context of lion, which are one of the key species the PCF helps to protect. But it’s also working to protect cheetah. ⁠

Just last week, one of Big Life’s co-founders and Board Director Tom Hill spotted four new cheetah cubs near his residence in the Chyulu Hills. And anecdotally they’ve been seen with increasing frequency across the ecosystem, including in Kimana Sanctuary. ⁠

Cheetah need all the help we can give them to keep them thriving. There are estimated to be only about 1,000 individuals spread across Kenya and Tanzania, and their population numbers are declining. They are listed as “vulnerable” and extinct in 30+ countries within their original geographic range. ⁠

Photo by @jeremy.goss

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