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


2. Why in the News


3. Background & Evolution


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

Scientific / Technological

Geopolitical / Strategic

Legal / Constitutional

Administrative

Historical


6. Recent Developments (Last 12–18 Months)


7. Prelims Hooks (High-Density Factual Bullets)

  1. Cheetah was declared extinct in India in 1952; last confirmed wild sighting was in 1947 in Koriya (then undivided MP).
  2. 8 Namibian cheetahs were released at KNP by PM Modi on September 17, 2022 — India's 75th Independence anniversary year.
  3. This was the first intercontinental translocation of a large carnivore in world history.
  4. KNP is located in Sheopur district, Madhya Pradesh; the wildlife sanctuary spans ~1,235 km².
  5. Implementing agency: National Tiger Conservation Authority (NTCA) under MoEFCC (not MoA or MoF).
  6. Species translocated: African cheetah (Acinonyx jubatus jubatus) — NOT the Asiatic cheetah (A. j. venaticus, found in Iran, Critically Endangered).
  7. IUCN Red List status of African cheetah: Vulnerable.
  8. Aasha's five cubs were born on February 7, 2026 — India's cheetah count was 35 at that point. [S4]
  9. By March 2026, India's total cheetah count rose to 53, with 33 Indian-born cubs. [S3]
  10. Botswana cohort of 9 cheetahs arrived in February 2026 — third African nation to supply cheetahs after Namibia and South Africa. [S2]
  11. Long-term target: 60–70 cheetahs across a ~17,000 km² Kuno–Gandhisagar metapopulation landscape. [S3]
  12. Gandhisagar Wildlife Sanctuary (MP) is the designated second site for cheetah establishment under Project Cheetah. [S3]
  13. The Supreme Court stayed the cheetah reintroduction project from 2012 to 2020; its 2020 order cleared the way.
  14. Cheetah Conservation Fund (CCF), Namibia is India's primary international partner for Project Cheetah.
  15. 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

  1. 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.
  2. 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).
  3. 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.
  4. 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.
  5. 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