Close-up of two cheetah cubs sitting together on the ground, one with its tongue slightly out while the other looks on.

Cheetahs

Dogs Saving Cats!

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Their cubs are they’re quite cute. They have a really interesting um chirp which is aw and through mimicry they look like a honey badger which is a very aggressive. African animal and that’s actually a protection for them when they’re not with their mom all the time.

They kind of fly through the air and there’s two points in the stride that they are not touching the ground at all when they’re all the way extended and then when they’re running their tail acts as a rudder for balance. So they’re just the best hunter in all of the savannah. Cheetahs are built for speed but not power and aggression. So they don’t have big powerful bones and big teeth or sharp claws.

Their claws are more doglike but again not being an aggressive animal. Lions and hyenas, jackals even will take the the cheetah’s food from it. We’ve lost about 90% of the cheetahs in the last 100 years from about 100,000 cheetahs 100 years ago to today sadly less than 7,500 cheetahs. In the um middle 70s I went to Namibia for the first time and that’s when I found that farmers were killing cheetahs. Farmers were killing cheetahs like flies. They said, “Oh, they’re horrible. It’s a threat to their livestock.” So, I really wanted to see if there was a way that I could stop the killing.

We developed use of livestock guarding dogs. We use a large breed of dog, the Anatolian Shepherd. They come from Turkey. They’ve been used for over 5,000 years to protect the livestock from wolves and bears. We breed them. We place them on the farmers when they are about 10 weeks of age and we’ve seen a loss in livestock to the farmers that have the dogs by over 80 to 100%. So they have been very very effective. So that means that the farmers don’t have to kill cheetahs.

The cheetah is not a fighter and so they will stay far away from a barking dog like that. just to raise the dogs up and and place them. It’s about $500 per puppy that we place. And so I’d really like to thank Endangered Species Revenge for the support that they’re giving us to help with our dog program. So it’s Dog Saving Cats or Bucks for Pups, but we’d like to place as many dogs as we can. So please help us help Endangered Species Revenge help the cheetah.

Did you know that 90% of the world’s cheetahs have vanished in just the last 100 years? Dr. Laurie Marker, Founder of Cheetah Conservation Fund, has devised a way for dogs to protect them!

Dr. Marker trains guard dogs to scare cheetahs away from farmers’ livestock – so the farmers don’t have to shoot these magnificent cats…who are Earth’s fastest land animal. Each pup costs $500 to raise!