Five cubs born to Namibian cheetah at Kuno National Park
UPSC Study Note: Five Cubs Born to Namibian Cheetah Aasha at Kuno National Park
1. At a Glance
- Project Cheetah is India's flagship wildlife reintroduction programme to restore the cheetah (Acinonyx jubatus), declared extinct in India in 1952, through translocation from Africa. [S1]
- The birth of five cubs to Namibian cheetah Aasha on February 7, 2026 at Kuno National Park (KNP), Madhya Pradesh marks another successful in-situ reproduction event — the strongest indicator of acclimatisation success. [S4]
- As of early 2026, India's total cheetah population reached 35 (24 Indian-born cubs + 11 translocated adults); by March 2026 it rose to 53 (33 Indian-born + translocated adults after Botswana cohort arrival). [S2][S3][S4]
- Prelims + Mains relevance: GS-III (Environment & Biodiversity), GS-II (Government Policy), plus ethics of wildlife management.
2. Why in the News
- February 7, 2026: Namibian cheetah Aasha delivered five cubs at KNP — the latest successful litter under Project Cheetah; announced by Union Environment Minister Bhupender Yadav. [S4]
- February 2026: Nine cheetahs from Botswana (6 females, 3 males) were inducted into KNP, welcomed by the Union Environment Minister — significantly expanding the gene pool. [S2]
- March 2026: Jwala (another Namibian cheetah) gave birth to five more cubs — the 10th successful cheetah litter on Indian soil — pushing the Indian-born count to 33 and total population to 53. [S3]
3. Background & Evolution
- 1952: Cheetah declared extinct in India (last recorded kill of wild cheetah in Koriya district, undivided MP, 1947). [S1]
- 1970s–2000s: Multiple failed proposals for reintroduction; controversy over sourcing from Iran (Asiatic cheetah, A. j. venaticus) vs. Africa. [S1]
- 2009: Supreme Court of India intervention; MoEFCC commissioned feasibility studies. [S1]
- 2020: Supreme Court cleared the way for African cheetah translocation after expert review; Action Plan for Introduction of Cheetah in India finalised. [S1]
- September 17, 2022: PM Narendra Modi released 8 Namibian cheetahs (5 females, 3 males) at KNP — historic moment, the first intercontinental translocation of a large carnivore in the world. [S5]
- January 2023: 12 South African cheetahs (7 females, 5 males) inducted at KNP, followed by subsequent Botswana cohort in February 2026 (9 cheetahs). [S2]
- September 2023: One-year milestone review; early mortalities noted (septicaemia, radio-collar injuries) prompting protocol revisions. [S6]
- 2024–2026: Steady births at KNP; successive litters confirm sustainable reproduction in Indian habitat. [S3][S4]
4. Core Static Facts
| Parameter | Detail |
|---|---|
| Species | African cheetah (Acinonyx jubatus jubatus) |
| IUCN Status | Vulnerable (Red List) |
| Declared extinct in India | 1952 |
| Primary site | Kuno National Park (KNP), Sheopur district, Madhya Pradesh |
| Secondary/expansion site | Gandhisagar Wildlife Sanctuary, MP |
| Long-term target landscape | ~17,000 km² Kuno–Gandhisagar metapopulation landscape |
| Population target | 60–70 cheetahs across metapopulation |
| Implementing ministry | Ministry of Environment, Forest and Climate Change (MoEFCC) |
| Nodal agency | National Tiger Conservation Authority (NTCA) |
| Project name | Project Cheetah |
| International partners | Namibia (Cheetah Conservation Fund), South Africa, Botswana |
| Legal basis | Wildlife (Protection) Act, 1972; SC order 2020 |
| KNP area | ~748 km² (core); part of larger ~1,235 km² sanctuary |
| Aasha's litter (Feb 7, 2026) | 5 cubs (healthy); India population = 35 at that point |
| Total population (March 2026) | 53 (33 Indian-born + translocated adults) |
| Botswana cohort (Feb 2026) | 9 cheetahs (6F + 3M) |
5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis
Environmental
- Cheetah reintroduction supports open savanna and grassland ecosystem restoration, a critically neglected biome in India's conservation architecture. [S1]
- Acts as an umbrella species: restoring cheetah habitat benefits dozens of co-existing prey species (chinkara, blackbuck, spotted deer). [S1]
- Provides carbon sink benefits by restoring degraded grasslands and open forests in central India. [S3]
- Success of in-situ births (33 Indian-born cubs by March 2026) signals effective habitat suitability and ecological carrying capacity at KNP. [S3]
Scientific / Technological
- Radio-collar telemetry and camera-trap networks used for 24×7 monitoring; early mortalities prompted switch to lighter, satellite-GPS collars. [S6]
- Quarantine protocols, veterinary support, and staged release (bomas → free range) follow IUCN guidelines for reintroduction. [S1]
- First-ever intercontinental large-carnivore translocation globally — generates scientific baseline for future rewilding efforts. [S5]
- Genetic diversity managed by sourcing from three countries (Namibia, South Africa, Botswana) to prevent inbreeding. [S2]
Geopolitical / Strategic
- MoU signed with Namibia (2022) and South Africa — built on bilateral wildlife diplomacy. [S1]
- Botswana cohort (Feb 2026) signals expansion of wildlife diplomacy to a third African partner. [S2]
- Positions India as a global leader in large-carnivore conservation, contrasting with historically poor record on grassland biome protection.
Legal / Constitutional
- Supreme Court of India initially stayed the project (2012–2020) over scientific disputes; its 2020 order permitted translocation after expert committee clearance. [S1]
- Governed by Wildlife (Protection) Act, 1972, Schedule I (cheetah listed as protected). [S1]
- NTCA exercises statutory oversight under the same Act (as amended in 2006). [S1]
Administrative
- Kuno Field Director cum Project Cheetah Director (Uttam Kumar Sharma as of Feb 2026) coordinates monitoring. [S4]
- Village relocation from KNP core zone remains partially incomplete, affecting carrying capacity.
- Early deaths (2023) triggered inter-ministerial review and external expert committees, highlighting governance challenges in novel translocation programmes. [S6]
Historical
- India lost the cheetah due to hunting (by Mughal and British-era rulers), habitat destruction, and prey-base collapse — unlike tiger/lion, the cheetah received no conservation attention in time. [S1]
- The 1947 event (3 cheetahs shot by Maharaja Ramanuj Pratap Singh of Surguja) is conventionally cited as the last confirmed wild cheetah sighting in India. [S1]
6. Recent Developments (Last 12–18 Months)
- February 7, 2026: Aasha (Namibian cheetah) delivers 5 cubs at KNP; India's cheetah count = 35 (24 Indian-born + 11 translocated adults); announced by Environment Minister Bhupender Yadav. [S4]
- February 2026: 9 Botswana cheetahs (6F + 3M) translocated to KNP — third country of origin, strengthening genetic diversity. [S2]
- March 2026: Jwala (Namibian cheetah) gives birth to 5 more cubs — 10th litter born on Indian soil; total population rises to 53, Indian-born cubs reach 33. [S3]
- 2025–26: Gandhisagar Wildlife Sanctuary prepared as second site for cheetah expansion; metapopulation management strategy formalised. [S3]
- 2025: Project Cheetah progress review highlights strong progress and promising future — PIB release documents systematic monitoring, health protocols, and habitat augmentation. [S3]
7. Prelims Hooks (High-Density Factual Bullets)
- Cheetah was declared extinct in India in 1952; last confirmed wild sighting was in 1947 in Koriya (then undivided MP).
- 8 Namibian cheetahs were released at KNP by PM Modi on September 17, 2022 — India's 75th Independence anniversary year.
- This was the first intercontinental translocation of a large carnivore in world history.
- KNP is located in Sheopur district, Madhya Pradesh; the wildlife sanctuary spans ~1,235 km².
- Implementing agency: National Tiger Conservation Authority (NTCA) under MoEFCC (not MoA or MoF).
- Species translocated: African cheetah (Acinonyx jubatus jubatus) — NOT the Asiatic cheetah (A. j. venaticus, found in Iran, Critically Endangered).
- IUCN Red List status of African cheetah: Vulnerable.
- Aasha's five cubs were born on February 7, 2026 — India's cheetah count was 35 at that point. [S4]
- By March 2026, India's total cheetah count rose to 53, with 33 Indian-born cubs. [S3]
- Botswana cohort of 9 cheetahs arrived in February 2026 — third African nation to supply cheetahs after Namibia and South Africa. [S2]
- Long-term target: 60–70 cheetahs across a ~17,000 km² Kuno–Gandhisagar metapopulation landscape. [S3]
- Gandhisagar Wildlife Sanctuary (MP) is the designated second site for cheetah establishment under Project Cheetah. [S3]
- The Supreme Court stayed the cheetah reintroduction project from 2012 to 2020; its 2020 order cleared the way.
- Cheetah Conservation Fund (CCF), Namibia is India's primary international partner for Project Cheetah.
- Project Cheetah Director at KNP (as of Feb 2026): Uttam Kumar Sharma. [S4]
8. Mains Relevance
GS Papers: - GS-III: Environment and Biodiversity — conservation strategies, reintroduction programmes, species-specific protection. - GS-II: Government policies and interventions for wildlife; bilateral relations (wildlife diplomacy with Namibia, South Africa, Botswana).
Syllabus Headings: - Conservation of biodiversity; species reintroduction and rewilding. - India's environmental policy and international cooperation.
Plausible Mains Question Stems: 1. "Project Cheetah is being hailed as a landmark conservation achievement, but also faces significant scientific and administrative challenges. Critically examine." (GS-III) 2. "Wildlife diplomacy has emerged as a new dimension of India's foreign policy. Discuss with reference to Project Cheetah and similar initiatives." (GS-II) 3. "The grassland and open-forest biome remains India's most neglected ecosystem. How does the reintroduction of the cheetah contribute to addressing this gap in India's conservation framework?" (GS-III)
9. Related Topics to Study Next
| Topic | Connection |
|---|---|
| Project Tiger | India's most successful large-carnivore conservation model; compare methodology and outcomes with Project Cheetah. |
| IUCN Red List categories | Prelims staple; cheetah is Vulnerable — contrast with tiger (Endangered), Asiatic cheetah (Critically Endangered). |
| Wildlife (Protection) Act, 1972 | Statutory basis for all wildlife reintroduction; Schedule I species protection. |
| National Tiger Conservation Authority (NTCA) | Nodal body for Project Cheetah; understand its mandate, composition, and powers. |
| Asiatic Lion (Gir) conservation & relocation debate | Parallel controversy on single-site vulnerability; SC ordered relocation to Kuno (same site now used for cheetah). |
| Grassland and Savanna Ecosystem Restoration | Cheetah reintroduction is embedded in a broader biome-restoration agenda; key for environment GS-III. |
| India's Biodiversity Targets (Kunming-Montreal GBF, 2022) | India's commitment to 30×30 target; cheetah project as a flagship example of species recovery. |
| Kuno National Park as a National Park | Notified history, core-buffer zones, human-wildlife conflict, village relocation status. |
10. Common Errors / Trap Areas
- African vs. Asiatic cheetah confusion: India translocated African cheetah (A. j. jubatus), NOT the Asiatic cheetah (A. j. venaticus) found only in Iran. The original debate was about sourcing Asiatic cheetahs from Iran; this was ultimately rejected.
- Wrong implementing agency: Project Cheetah is managed by NTCA under MoEFCC — not the Wildlife Institute of India (WII) alone (WII is a scientific advisor, not the implementing body).
- Confusing KNP's cheetah role with the Asiatic Lion relocation: The Supreme Court's 2013 judgment ordered Asiatic lion relocation to Kuno Palpur (now KNP) — aspirants confuse this with the cheetah project. The lion relocation has not taken place; KNP was later allocated to cheetahs.
- Population count at different dates: Population fluctuated due to deaths and births; as of Feb 7, 2026 it was 35; by March 2026 it reached 53. Mixing these numbers in an answer would be penalised.
- Treating KNP as the only site: Gandhisagar Wildlife Sanctuary is the designated second site and an integral part of the metapopulation strategy — omitting this gives an incomplete answer on Project Cheetah's geographic scope.
11. Sources
- [S1] "A Sprinting Revival: The Return of the Cheetah" — https://www.pib.gov.in/PressReleasePage.aspx?PRID=2202894 — (Tier 1: pib.gov.in)
- [S2] "Union Environment Minister Shri Bhupender Yadav welcomes 9 Cheetahs from Botswana, at Kuno National Park" — https://www.pib.gov.in/PressReleasePage.aspx?PRID=2233898 — (Tier 1: pib.gov.in)
- [S3] "Project Cheetah: India's Landmark Wildlife Restoration Initiative Shows Strong Progress and Promising Future" — https://www.pib.gov.in/PressReleasePage.aspx?PRID=2262834 — (Tier 1: pib.gov.in)
- [S4] Article: "Five cubs born to Namibian cheetah at Kuno National Park" — The Hindu, February 8, 2026 — https://www.thehindu.com/todays-paper/2026-02-08/th_international/articleG9GFIA29S-13414850.ece — (Tier 4: thehindu.com; primary article supplied)
- [S5] "PM releases wild Cheetahs — which had become extinct from India — in Kuno National Park" — https://www.pib.gov.in/Pressreleaseshare.aspx?PRID=1860055 — (Tier 1: pib.gov.in)
- [S6] "Preliminary analysis of Cheetah mortalities at Kuno National Park point to natural causes: NTCA" — https://www.pib.gov.in/PressReleasePage.aspx?PRID=1939948 — (Tier 1: pib.gov.in)
- [S7] "Cheetah numbers in India reach 53, as Jwala gives birth to five cubs at Kuno National Park; Indian-born Cubs rise to 33" — https://www.pib.gov.in/PressReleasePage.aspx?PRID=2236900 — (Tier 1: pib.gov.in)