Tiger from Ranthambore enters Kuno, official says no threat to cheetahs

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A sub-adult tiger from Rajasthan has entered Madhya Pradesh’s Kuno National Park (KNP), where cheetahs from Africa have been introduced to revive their population in the country, an official said.

There is no direct threat to the cheetahs as they have been kept in soft enclosures or ‘bomas’ in the park, KNP director Uttam Sharma told PTI on Sunday.

“Tiger pugmarks were found inside the KNP two to three days back,” he said.

The tiger, around three years old, forayed into the protected forest from Rajasthan’s Ranthambore Tiger Reserve, which was about 100 km from KNP, officials said.

KNP currently has seven male and as many female cheetahs and a cub.

Officials said leopards too are scared of tigers and are very watchful of them. KNP has a high density of leopards, they said.

The Kuno National Park is spread over 748 sq km and has a buffer area of 487 sq km.

The average weight of a male tiger is about 200 kg, while that of a male cheetah is between 55 and 60 kg, as per officials.

Under the cheetah reintroduction project, eight Namibian cheetahs, comprising five females and three males, were released into enclosures at KNP on September 17 last year. Cheetahs were declared extinct in India in 1952.

In February this year, 12 more cheetahs arrived at KNP from South Africa. Later, four cubs were born in the park, raising the number of the felines to 24.

Since March, nine cheetahs, including three cubs, have died, while 14 cheetahs and one cub are in healthy condition, officials earlier said.

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