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Category:

Research

Leopard ProgramThe Persian Leopard Project in Northeastern Iran

The “Iranian” GPS-Satellite collared leopard visits Turkmenistan!

by مدیر سایت October 13, 2015
written by مدیر سایت 2 minutes read

On October 5th, 2015, one of the four male Persian leopards GPS-collared within the Persian Leopard Project in north-eastern Iran crossed Iran-Turkmenistan border. “Borzou”, an old male of over 10-years-old, has been continuously monitored since 22st of February 2015, when he was captured in Tandoureh National Park, Razavi Khorasan province. Bordou has been roaming outside the national park since September 26th, and has walked around 20 km through several villages and human development areas to reach the border with Turkmenistan.

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The yellow circle in left shows the first GPS location of Borzou in Turkmenistan that the research team received after he crossed the border (white line).

The research team led by Iranian Cheetah Society’s senior research Mohammad Farhadinia, has been closely working with local wildlife authority and decision makers during this period to minimize the risk of human-leopard interactions. There has been no claim of livestock loss or attack to human due to leopards by local people during this period. Interestingly, Borzou remained unspotted within this human-dominated landscape before crossing the border into the Turkmenistan’s Kopet Dag Mountains.

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Borzou photographed in Tandoureh National Park, northeastern Iran, before starting his journey to the nearby Turkmenistan

The Borzou’s successful dispersal to Turkmenistan is the first verifiable record of leopard movements between Iran and Turkmenistan, stressing the need for transboundary cooperation and conservation initiatives between these two countries. The research team now tries to contact Turkmen authorities to ensure Borzou’s safe journey inside this country.

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GPS locations and track lines show Borzou movement pattern around two mounths ago when he left the national park

This is not the first time that Borzou leaves its territory in TandourehNational Park. Around two months ago he left the reserve and spent 23 days in the surrounding villages, where he killed several domestic dogs and one wild ewe.

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Remains of domestic dog killed by Borzou on the outskirts of a village in periphery of Tandoureh National Park, northeastern Iran

The Ecology and Conservation of the Persian Leopard in Northeastern Iran Project is Mohammad’s PhD with University of Oxford’s WildCRU, and is running in collaboration with the Iranian Cheetah Society, Iran Department of the Environment, Razavi Khorasan Provincial Office of Iran Department of the Environment, and Panthera.

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The yellow landmark shows location of the domestic dog killed by Borzou near a fruit orchard next to a local road to the village

October 13, 2015 0 comments
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Asiatic Cheetah Conservation Program

Just released: Multiple cheetah movements between the key reserves

by مدیر سایت October 11, 2015
written by مدیر سایت 2 minutes read

In July 2015, Conservation of the Asiatic Cheetah Project (CACP) reported observation of a female cheetah with two cubs by local rangers in Naybandan Wildlife Refuge, South Khorasan province. Consequently the Iranian Cheetah Society deployed several camera traps in the reserve in an attempt to photograph this family.

Pouyan Frans

The first photograph of Pouyan, captured in Naybandan Wildlife Refuge by a team from National Geographic in December 2011

Despite we were unable to photo-capture the cheetah family after one month of intensive camera-trapping, three solitary male cheetahs were identified.

Comparison of coat patterns to identify unique cheetah individuals revealed a stunning finding; “Pouyan”, the cheetah we previously reported because of his 215-km journey to Dare-Anjir Wildlife Refuge, is now back to Naybandan!

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Pouyan photographed in Dare-Anjir Wildlife Refuge by the Iranian Cheetah Society in  2014

Considering the distance between the camera trap stations in these two reserves, Pouyan has walked at least around 415 km within 9 months between these two reserves.

Map

Location of camera-trap stations where Pouyan photographed multiple times between December 2011 and July 2015. Nayabandan Wildlife Refuge is located in east with the landmark Nayband Mount and Dare-Anjir Wildlife Refuge in the west.

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The most recent photograph of Pouyan captured in Naybandan Wildlife Refuge in July 2015
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Map showing location of Naybandan Wildlife Refuge in east and Dare-Anjir Wildlife Refuge in west where Pouyan photographed multiple times between December 2011 and July 2015.

Pouyan was first photographed by a team from National Geographic in Naybandan in December 2011. We could not recapture him through the first phase of the nation-wide cheetah monitoring program. It was only on December 1, 2014 that Pouyan photo-captured by one of our camera-traps in Dare-Anjir Wildlife Refuge, confirming for the first time dispersal between these two distantly-located reserves in the heart of central Iranian desert. 

Pouyaan Pattern Latin

The unique spot pattern of Pouyan helped to identify him in three different years.

The Iranian Cheetah Society’s cheetah monitoring program in Naybandan Wildlife Refuge is running in collaboration with South Khorasan Department of the Environment, CACP, and Part Wildlife Discovery Institute.

October 11, 2015 0 comments
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ICS NewsResearch

New camera-trap photographs from Dare-Anjir Wildlife Refuge

by مدیر سایت October 4, 2015
written by مدیر سایت 1 minutes read

We are busy with the second phase of our nation-wide cheetah monitoring program in several key reserves in Yazd province. During this summer we have focused our trapping efforts on water points, as water scarcity in this region forces many wildlife species, including cheetahs, to visit water points more frequently. Here you can see some of these pictures obtained from Dare-Anjir Wildlife Refuge in central Iran. The Iranian Cheetah Society’s cheetah monitoring program is running in collaboration with Iran Department of the Environment and Conservation of the Asiatic Cheetah Project.

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October 4, 2015 0 comments
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Asiatic Cheetah Conservation ProgramResearch

Cheetah coalition of three brothers roams over Dare-Anjir Wildlife Refuge

by مدیر سایت September 29, 2015
written by مدیر سایت 1 minutes read

New pictures from the Iranian Cheetah Society’s nation-wide cheetah monitoring program show the coalition continuously photo-trapped in Dare-Anjir Wildlife Refuge since 2011. The three brothers, named as “Ardalan”, “Ardavan”, and “Arsalan”, were first recorded with their mother in Siah-Kouh National Park, Yazd province, in 2010. Since then, the coalition has established itself in Dare-Anjir and has been recorded several times in different locations.

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Ardalan in Dare Anjir Wildlife Refuge

Interestingly, a new male has been photo-trapped recently in the area. This male, named as “Homino”, seems to follow the coalition and has been photographed with at least of the male cheetahs from the coalition.

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Homino in Dare Anjir Wildlife Refuge

Iranian Cheetah Society runs the second phase of the nation-wide cheetah monitoring program in collaboration with Yazd Department of the Environment and Conservation of the Asiatic Cheetah Project. The program launched in August 2015 and is expected to continue in a number of key cheetah reserves during this fall.

Arsalan in Dare Anjir Wildlife Refuge
Ardavan in Dare Anjir Wildlife Refuge
September 29, 2015 0 comments
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Asiatic Cheetah Conservation ProgramResearch

The mother of three cubs we photographed in Miandasht Wildlife Refuge in 2013!

by مدیر سایت September 28, 2015
written by مدیر سایت 1 minutes read

In late August 2015, staff of North Khorasan Department of the Environment photographed a female cheetah with three cubs in Miandasht Wildlife Refuge, north-eastern Iran. Experts from the Iranian Cheetah Society (ICS) compared this photo with camera-trap pictures obtained from the country-scale demography assessment of cheetahs in Iran running by ICS (here). We are thrilled to inform that that the new cheetah mother has been photographed in 2013 as a cheetah cub in another family of a female cheetah and three cubs!
This finding is crucial as very little is known about the population demography and reproduction biology of the Critically Endangered Asiatic cheetahs. In collaboration with the Conservation of the Asiatic Cheetah Project, Iran Department of the Environment, the nation-wide cheetah monitoring project is running by ICS across multiple reserves in north-eastern and central Iran.

cub photo-captured
cub photo-captured

 

September 28, 2015 0 comments
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Publicationsyuznameh

Just released: The Iranian Cheetah Society’s summer 2015 newsletter

by مدیر سایت September 28, 2015
written by مدیر سایت 0 minutes read

The 21st issue of Yuznameh, the internal newsletter of the Iranian Cheetah Society in Farsi, just released. Our top story features the recently discovered long-distance movement of a male cheetah in central Iran (here). Also highlighted are: the second year of Yahya Prize, updates from the Persian leopard project in northeastern Iran, news from the nation-wide cheetah monitoring program, the Iranian Cheetah Society’s scientific and popular publications, wildlife seminars, etc.

September 28, 2015 0 comments
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Leopard ProgramResearch

The 4th Persian leopard radio-collared in northeastern Iran

by مدیر سایت September 5, 2015
written by مدیر سایت 1 minutes read

The Persian Leopard Project in North-eastern Iran led by ICS’ senior researcher Mohammad Farhadinia, successfully radio-collared another male leopard in Tandoureh National Park in Razavi Khorasan province. As Mohammad’s PhD study with University of Oxford’s WildCRU and in collaboration with Iran Department of the Environment and Panthera, the project seeks to address a number of ecological and conservation questions regarding the persistence of Persian leopards on fragmented key habitats in northeastern Iran along borders with Turkmenistan.

The new leopard, a young male of about 3-4 years old, was named “Kaveh”, after one of the hard-working research assistants in the project. The project has so far successfully radio-collared three other adult male leopards in this reserve. A team of Iranian documentary makers are closely filming the project for a documentary which is planned to be launched in 2017/18.

leopard radio-collared
leopard radio-collared

September 5, 2015 0 comments
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Asiatic Cheetah Conservation ProgramResearch

Updates from the nation-wide cheetah monitoring program

by مدیر سایت August 24, 2015
written by مدیر سایت 1 minutes read

The Iranian Cheetah Society (ICS) launched the first phase of the cheetah monitoring program across some key cheetah reserves in 2012. Abbas Abad Wildlife Refuge in Esfahan province, central Iran, is one of these key habitats. In collaboration with Esfahan Department of the Environment, Naeen Office of Department of the Environment, and Conservation of the Asiatic Cheetah Project (CACP), ICS’ camera traps on water points in Abbas Abad have recently captured an array of large to medium-size mammal species, including the Endangered Persian leopard.

The camera trapping survey in Abbas Abad will continue throughout this summer and fall 2015 focusing on areas with high likelihood of cheetah occurrence.

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monitoring program
August 24, 2015 0 comments
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Asiatic Cheetah Conservation ProgramRangers Programwork shop

Training workshops for cheetah rangers

by مدیر سایت August 19, 2015
written by مدیر سایت 1 minutes read

In collaboration with Conservation of the Asiatic Cheetah Project and Persian Wildlife Heritage Foundation, the Iranian Cheetah Society (ICS) launches training workshops for rangers in cheetah reserves of Iran. Rangers from four different cheetah reserves attended the first workshop at Kavir National Park, Semnan province. Last updates about the status of cheetahs in Iran, conservation efforts in different sites, preliminary results of the recent camera-trapping studies, and working with local people and community-based management of cheetah reserves were among the issues presented in the workshop. These series of workshops are going to be continued in other cheetah reserves during 2015/2016.

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August 19, 2015 0 comments
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Public Relations

The Iranian Cheetah Society investigates the alleged cheetah video

by مدیر سایت August 11, 2015
written by مدیر سایت 1 minutes read

Very recently a video of a captive cheetah has rapidly spread on the web, in which apparently the owner is talking with the animal in Farsi. The Iranian Cheetah Society is investigating the originality of the video and has tried to contact the video creator. It is not understood if the video is actually captured in Iran, or in one of the Persian Gulf countries where keeping exotic animals like cheetahs are common, and if the animal in this video is an Asiatic cheetah. It is not possible to draw any firm conclusion based on this video as Asiatic and African cheetahs are morphologically are almost look alike. The Iranian Cheetah Society encourages the public to contact us with any information about this video at: [email protected]

alleged cheetah video
August 11, 2015 0 comments
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  • New Report on Asiatic Cheetah Population in Iran Released
  • Iranian Cheetah Society Releases Triennial Report For 2021-2023
  • ICS Participated in First Cheetah Global Summit held in Ethiopia
  • Khorshid: The Everlasting Hope of Turan
  • Explorers of Hope Follow the Trail of a Cheetah in a Rural Area

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New Report on Asiatic Cheetah Population in Iran Released

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Iranian Cheetah Society Releases Triennial Report For 2021-2023

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ICS Participated in First Cheetah Global Summit held in Ethiopia

Asiatic Cheetah cubs, Khorshid Family

Khorshid: The Everlasting Hope of Turan

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Iranian Cheetah Society
  • Home
  • Projects
    • Asiatic Cheetah Monitoring Population
    • Explorers of Hope
    • Rangers Program
    • Water For Cheetahs
  • Who We Are
    • About Us
    • Executive Team
    • Partner Organizations
    • International Donors of 2023
  • Species
    • Asiatic Cheetah
  • News
    • News Archive
    • Press Room
    • Subscribe to Newsletter
  • Download
    • Asiatic Cheetah Population Monitoring Report (2021-2023)
    • 2021-2023 Triennial Activity Report
    • 2019-2020 Biannual Report
    • 2018 report
    • Asiatic Cheetah Infographic
  • Contact
  • DONATE
  • فارسی