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ICS in News

Two Female Asiatic Cheetahs Identified in Wild in Iran

by pourmir August 30, 2016
written by pourmir 2 minutes read

Conservationists say only two female Asiatic cheetahs are known to be alive in the wild in Iran, which hosts the last surviving population.

Asiatic cheetahs, also known as Iranian cheetahs, are a subspecies of the fastest animal on earth and classified as critically endangered, with fewer than 40 believed to remain in Iran.As part of efforts to raise the animal’s profile, in the past decade cheetahs have been displayed on the national football team’s kit and on stamps, but it has become increasingly imperilled.

Tuesday was Iran’s national cheetah day, marking an event more than two decades ago when a cub named Marita survived an attack by a group of villagers in which his mother and two siblings were killed. Marita became a national symbol.

Morteza Eslami, head of the Iranian Cheetah Society (ICS), a Tehran-based NGO, said camera traps in areas with the most Asiatic cheetahs had seen just two females in recent months. “The situation is very critical,” he said. “We have been monitoring the situation closely in the past five years and the population of female Asiatic cheetahs has significantly dropped.” Delaram Ashayeri, an independent conservationist, said: “Unfortunately the number of female cheetahs has been dwindling. In areas where camera traps have been operating for a long time … we are not seeing many female cheetahs or we’re seeing only carcasses.”

In the past 15 years, 48 cheetahs are believed to have died, seven from natural causes, 21 at the hands of farmers, 15 in car accidents and five as a result of hunting.

Of the two female cheetahs believed to be still alive, one is in Turan national park and the other in the nearby Miandasht reserve.

“In some of our other environmental areas we haven’t had any reports of female cheetahs for at least two years now, including in an area near the city of Yazd where only four male cheetahs survive,” Eslami said.

Two Asiatic cheetahs – a male, Koushki, and a female, Delbar – are held in captivity at Tehran’s Pardisan Park research centre. They have not yet successfully mated.

August 30, 2016 0 comments
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Asiatic Cheetah Conservation Programcheetah dayResearch

Urgent action is needed to save the Iranian cheetah population from extinction

by pourmir August 29, 2016
written by pourmir 2 minutes read

On August 29th 2016, the Iranian Cheetah Society (ICS) held a press conference explaining its plans for the 10th anniversary of the National Cheetah Day. During this conference CEO of ICS, Morteza Eslami, stressed that ICS intensive field works since 2012 suggest that the current status of the Iranian cheetah population is a source of major concern. He explained that during 2012 ICS surveys, 20 cheetah individuals were photographed inside the cheetah reserves, of which 7 were females. In 2013-14 surveys, 23 Asiatic cheetahs were identified through extensive camera-trapping efforts, but only 4 were females. Eslami added that 2016 surveys have been able to document as few as only 2 female cheetahs, given the fact that two out of 4 females we identified in 2013-14 surveys died in vehicle collisions in 2015-16. Eslami noted that the available data is insufficient to judge if the cheetah population trend is declining. “However, there is strong evidence that if we do not act now, there would be no hope for the survival of the Iranian cheetahs by 2020”, Eslami added.
Furthermore, Eslami explained that currently 2 female cheetahs have been photo-captured in Miandasht Wildlife Refuge, and other partners have been able to confirm the presence of at least one female cheetah in Touran Biosphere Reserve. No female cheetahs have been recorded in the southern cheetah nuclei in the south and south-central Iran since 2012. Eslami stressed that the Iranian cheetah population appears to be very small population, perhaps about 40 individuals, so increasingly vulnerable to catastrophic events. ICS believes that still there is hope for saving the Iranian cheetah population. Yet, conservation efforts must be doubled, national and international partners must work together and focus their efforts to minimize cheetah mortalities and isolation of the remaining populations, and roads trespassing or surrounding critical cheetah habitats must be secured for cheetah movements to guarantee cheetah population connectivity.

August 29, 2016 0 comments
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Asiatic Cheetah Conservation ProgramAsiatic Cheetah Population Monitoring ProgramResearch

Preliminary results from the Nation-wide Cheetah Monitoring Program: The cheetah coalition is still roaming in Yazd province

by pourmir August 25, 2016
written by pourmir 1 minutes read

New data obtained during the third phase of nation-wide cheetah monitoring program confirm the persistence of a male cheetah coalition we previously identified in 2012 in Darreh Anjir Wildlife Refuge, Yazd province.
Within this phase of our intensive field surveys in the south-central and central Iran, during late May-July our team employed 50 remotely-triggered camera traps across key cheetah sites in Yazd province, including Darreh Anjir Wildlife Refuge, Bahabad No-Hunting Area, and two sites outside the current network of protected areas. Our goal is to monitor the status of cheetah individuals we have identified since 2012 surveys, and to investigate if any female cheetahs remain across the cheetah range in Yazd province.
After more than 2 months of camera-trapping surveys, about 270000 photos have been obtained. Preliminary analysis of the cheetah photos confirms the persistence of 4 male cheetahs known to us since 2012, including a male coalition of three cheetahs we named as “Ardalan”, “Arsalan”, and “Ardavan”, and “Hominu” a lone male cheetah. Unfortunately, neither any female cheetahs nor any sign of reproduction has been obtained in our camera-trapping effort.
The Iranian Cheetah Society is now extending the monitoring program into Naybandan Wildlife Refuge, South Khorasan province, and will then continue with surveying Miandasht Wildlife Refuge in north-eastern Iran. Our works is done in collaboration with provincial offices of Iran Department of Environment and Conservation of the Asiatic Cheetah Project (CACP).

 

August 25, 2016 0 comments
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Education and Capacity BuildingEducational tools

Persian Leopard Info-graphic poster published

by pourmir August 21, 2016
written by pourmir 0 minutes read

After the successful experience of the cheetah infographic poster, the “Persian Leopard” infographic poster was developed and released in 3000 numbers in collaboration with the Infogram Institute and the Department of Environment of Alborz province,
Persian leopard infographic poster was unveiled through a ceremony in presence of Alborz DoE deputies and authorities of Alborz Province. These posters will be distributed in local villages and rural areas which are located in the leopard habitat, in order to raise awareness about this species.

August 21, 2016 0 comments
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Asiatic Cheetah Population Monitoring ProgramResearch

Grey wolf photographed for the first time in the cheetah reserve

by pourmir August 9, 2016
written by pourmir 1 minutes read

During the third year of country-scale monitoring of the Critically Endangered Asiatic cheetah in Iran, our research team was surprised by finding the first confirmed evidence of wolf presence in Darreh Anjir Wildlife Refuge, Yazd province.
Located in south-central Iran, Darreh Anjir Wildlife Refuge appears crucial the connectivity of cheetah populations in Iran. The reserve has been continuously surveyed by the Iranian Cheetah Society (ICS) and its partners for about 6 years, but until now no information was available about the co-occurrence of grey wolves in the area. Interestingly, our trail cameras have also captured footages of the striped hyena in the reserve after a 6-year gap.
ICS is running the third round of nation-wide camera trap monitoring of the Asiatic cheetah in collaboration with Provincial Offices of Iran Department of Environment and Conservation of the Asiatic Cheetah Project. The project aims to reveal detailed information about the population and breeding status, as well as movement ecology of the rare and elusive Asiatic cheetah in its last stronghold in Iran.

August 9, 2016 0 comments
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Uncategorized

“Afghanistan and Iran’s wildlife” workshop

by pourmir June 6, 2016
written by pourmir 0 minutes read

ICS Educational program and tools group went to Farhang school on Wednesday , the 25th of May 2016 , to run a workshop on “Afghanistan and Iran’s wildlife” for age groups of 7 to 16 . In this two hour educational program students got acquainted with different species of Afghanistan and Iran, their biological needs , and the threats towards some of them; through some group activities, games, conversations, and movie discussions . ICS Educational tools and program group hopes to hold more similar programs in other foreigner schools in Iran.

June 6, 2016 0 comments
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Research

Made in Iran: A new camera trap for cheetah monitoring

by مدیر سایت April 2, 2016
written by مدیر سایت 1 minutes read

A brand new camera trap made by an Iranian student successfully captured several photos of free-ranging Asiatic cheetahs in central Iran. Developed by Ehsan Soleimani, the new camera features a 20-megapixel sensor and a solar panel recharging kit, yet weights less than 700 grams and can support a 128 GB memory card.

Camera installation by Mr Ehsan Soleimani

Together with ICS researchers, Ehsan deployed his camera in Darre Anjir Wildlife Refuge, Yazd province, during a series of evaluation tests. After about 1.5 month, this camera successfully captured several photos of two cheetah brothers known to us as “Ardalan” and “Arsalan”. Ehsan hopes that his cameras soon will be available for intensive camera trapping surveys of cheetahs in Iran, where purchasing trail cameras from the market is currently extremely challenging because of the country’s isolation during the past decade.

Ardalan
Arsalan
April 2, 2016 0 comments
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ICS NewsletterPublications

ICS’ Fall-Winter 2015/16 English newsletter released

by مدیر سایت March 12, 2016
written by مدیر سایت 1 minutes read

The 3rd issue of ICS Letter, the English newsletter of the Iranian Cheetah Society, just released. Our top story features identification the cheetah died in NE Iran, which highlights the important of preserving cheetah’s biological corridors. Also highlighted are: Pallas’s cat photographed in NE Iran, socio-economic consequences of cattle predation by the Persian leopard, the cheetah family photographed again in NE Iran, a good season for leopard photography, another cheetah re-photographed after more than 4 years, leveraging trans-boundary partnerships for conservation of leopards in the Caucasus, etc.

Download the online version of this issue of ICS Letter here.

March 12, 2016 0 comments
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Festivals & Conferences

ICS attended Iran International Environment Exhibition

by مدیر سایت March 4, 2016
written by مدیر سایت 1 minutes read

The 15th Iran International Environment Exhibition was held on during 29 February-3 March 2016 in the Iranian capital Tehran. The event hosted several Iranian and international companies active in the field of environmental conservation and engineering, together with provincial offices of Iran Department of Environment, universities, and NGOs.

ICS attended this event as previous years, introducing some of its conservation-oriented activities and campaigns focusing on the endangered Iranian carnivores. Presenting the results of the first and second nation-wide cheetah monitoring program to the public was also one of the ICS’ key moments during this event. Within the last day, a mini-conference discussing different aspects of the Persian Leopard Project in Northeastern Iran was also a much-attended event during the exhibition.

March 4, 2016 0 comments
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Asiatic Cheetah Conservation ProgramAsiatic Cheetah Population Monitoring ProgramEducational Activities

Shepherd dogs threatens Asiatic Cheetah cubs in Miandasht

by مدیر سایت February 29, 2016
written by مدیر سایت 1 minutes read

Miandasht Wildlife Refuge is one of the key cheetah reserves in northeastern Iran. Monitoring of the reserves using camera-traps by ICS has revealed at least 7 cheetah individuals in this reserve, which is one of the largest known populations of the Critically Endangered Asiatic cheetah. ICS’ camera-traps have also documented the presence of at least two different cheetah families with 4 dependant cubs.

Every year during the autumn and winter seasons, a number of traditional pastoralists are permitted to graze their herd in a portion of Miandasht. These pastoralists use more than 35 shepherd dogs for their herds. Shepherd dogs are serious threats for cheetah cubs, as they can easily chase cheetah families and kill the cubs, as previously documented in different locations in Iran.

During the winter 2016, ICS biologists in collaboration with the local wildlife authority and local rangers in Miandasht, run a rapid awareness effort for about 90% of herders entered the reserve. With this effort, ICS biologists discussed with herders different aspects of livestock herding and potential threats to cheetahs in Miandasht, stressing on managing shepherd dogs in order to minimize the risk of encountering with cheetahs. Also, some gifts were presented to the herders with signs and photos of cheetahs, as a reminder for the fact that local herders can play an important role in conservation efforts for cheetahs in Iran.

Shepherd dogs treats
Shepherd dogs treats
Shepherd dogs treats
Shepherd dogs treats
February 29, 2016 0 comments
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Latest News

  • 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

Iranian Cheetah Society Releases Triennial Report on Wildlife Conservation and Asiatic Cheetah Conservation

Iranian Cheetah Society Releases Triennial Report For 2021-2023

Iranian Cheetah Society team with the Laurie Marker from CCF

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
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    • Explorers of Hope
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  • Who We Are
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    • 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