Understanding food needs of carnivores, particularly the endangered Persian leopard is an essential topic among managers and experts. Effective conservation planning of predator
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Download Cheetah Day Film and Spread the Word to Reach 1000 Aim
As 6th year of celebration, Cheetah Day Festival is going to be held since 6 to 14 September. However, 2012 event is held in a different way: It is an electronic festival which is hosted by many people’s PCs. Accordingly, in partnership with other Iranian NGOs, the Iranian Cheetah Society (ICS) is leading the initiative through launching a website wishing to educate at least 1000 Iranians about the cheetah. To do so, a website has been developed and a short film has been produced by the ICS film crew on below addresses. You are invited to visit the websites, download the film and share it with others to spread the word of the Asiatic cheetah in Iran as well as abroad. After holding for half-decade, the Cheetah Day Festival is the largest wildlife-based gathering in Iran which attracts huge media coverage on benefit of the critically endangered Asiatic cheetah. 31 August has been named as Cheetah Day in Iran which dates back to 1994 when a cheetah was rescued from unaware people after losing her mother with two siblings on a waterhole in central Iran. Since then, numerous educational programs have been organized in various parts of Iran so now a majority of Iranians are aware that their country is the last stronghold. In 2012, Due no Non-Aligned Movement (NAM) Summit in Tehran, the festival was postponed.
Fantastic camera trap photos of three cheetah cubs in Iran
A family of Asiatic cheetahs has been photo-trapped for the first time in north-eastern Iran. During an ongoing intensive monitoring of the cheetahs by means of camera traps in Miandasht Wildlife Refuge, an adult cheetah with her three small cubs was photographed. The animals were recorded on several occasions while coming to water sources to drink. The story has been featured on online magazine Wildlife Extra.
Fantastic camera trap photos of three cheetah cubs in Iran
An Extraordinary Record of Three Cubs with Cheetah Mom in NE Iran
A family of Asiatic cheetahs has been photo-trapped for the first time in northeastern Iran. During an ongoing intensive monitoring of the cheetahs by means of camera traps in Miandasht Wildlife Refuge, an adult cheetah in companion of her three small cubs was taken. The animals were recorded on several occasions while coming to water sources to drink. Not older than three months, the cheetahs cubs look healthy still keeping their mantle which is typical of small cheetah cubs. In August 2010, another family of the cheetahs were sighted by locals in this area, two cubs with their mom which later were approved based on their signs. However, this is an extraordinary record of a large family on pictures in northeastern Iran, indicating the area
New Hope for Cheetahs in Iran: A Lactating Female in Miandasht
Recent camera trapping efforts in northeastern Iran indicate that the Asiatic cheetahs have bred in the area. Accordingly, an adult female cheetah has been photo trapped while coming to a waterhole in Miandasht Wildlife Refuge, a reserve which has been monitored by the Iranian Cheetah Society (ICS) since 2003. Despite deployment of high-tech digital camera traps at all known water sources of this arid area since early summer; however, the cheetah who must have cubs was taken only once at these water sources, revealing its magnificent adaptability to survive in arid areas of Iran. The animal
Iran is considered to be an arid country with low annual rainfall for majority of its eastern half where the critically endangered Asiatic cheetahs roam. Over past decades, building artificial and improving natural waterholes for desert species has been a management action to moderate this limiting factor. However, in spite of high costs, this tool
Ranging across most of Africa and part of the Middle East, caracal is a medium-sized member of cat family. It occurs within majority of arid environments of central and eastern parts of Iran and is considered as the most ecologically studied lesser cat in the country. Globally, the species has been divided into 8 sub-species worldwide and the Asian sub-species is called C. caracal schmitzi. Moreover, a small range in Turkmenistan and northeastern Iran is called C. caracal michaelis. The IUCN lists C. caracal as a species of least concern, but concedes that C. caracal schmitzi is unclassified and C. caracal michaelis is endangered; C. c. michaelis appears to be threatened in most of its range. Paucity of available information on caracals in Iran raises the important question as to what sub-species it constitutes? After conducting genetic studies on Persian leopard in collaboration with Iranian Department of Environment and University of Tehran, the Iranian Cheetah Society (ICS) has officially initiated a new study since 2011 to investigate phylogeny and genetic diversity of the caracals in Iran which is in partnership with the Iranian DoE and Lisbon University, Portugal. So far, around 30 different caracals from different parts of Iran have been samples, mostly killed in road incidents or confiscated by game wardens and laboratory analysis are being undertaken. There is no doubt that reports of a specimen, however old, can help us in this research, especially from the northern and north-eastern parts of Iran. We are therefore urging the readers of this article to provide us with any information they may have on any type of specimen such as carcasses or stuffed animals.
As one of the smallest fox species in deserts of west Asia, Blanford’s or Afghan fox has recently been confirmed across a range of habitat types in Abbas Abad Wildlife Refuge, central Iran. It has been rarely studied in the wild and no proper knowledge was available about this small canid in Iran before application of camera traps. Meanwhile, ongoing camera trapping efforts in central Iran reveals the species presence in scattered locations in desert ecosystems of the country. Initiated since March 2012, the systematic camera trapping survey on 40 different locations indicated relatively high abundance of the Blanford
Based on recent camera trapping surveys conducted in central Iran, it was explored that huge distances have been covered by the Asiatic cheetahs. A famous female which has been monitored over the past three years was found to patrol between two reserves, namely as Siahkouh National Park and Dare Anjir Wildlife Refuge with an aerial distance of more than 130 km. The female was first found in Siahkoh in 2009 giving birth to a litter of three cheetah cubs, but she lost one of her cubs within the first months. She lived there until the second year of her cubs
Born in Siahkouh National Park in spring 2010, two cheetah siblings are now roaming Ariz No Hunting Area, central Iran. After losing a sibling during first months, the cheetahs accompanied by their mom walked more than 130 kilometers through vast deserts of central Iran to arrive in Dare Anjir Wildlife Refuge in summer 2011. Since last winter, they are dispersing southward and now they are ranging in Ariz, a newly established reserve just south of Dare Anjir. After brother