Cheetah Conservation Fund Partners with Smithsonian Researchers on New Study Revealing Decline of Genetic Diversity in Wild Cheetahs

  • by CCF Staff June 24, 2016

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Cheetah Conservation Fund Partners with Smithsonian Researchers on New Study Revealing Decline of Genetic Diversity in Wild Cheetahs

OTJIWARONGO, Namibia (24 June 2016) – Dr Laurie Marker, Founder and Executive Director of Cheetah Conservation Fund (CCF), and Dr Stephen J. O’Brien, long-time CCF research collaborator, former CCF Board Chairman and currently director of the Dobzhansky Center for Genome Bioinformatics at St. Petersburg State University in Russia, contributed research to a newly published study from the Smithsonian Conservation Biology Institute (SCBI).

“Continued decline in genetic diversity among wild cheetahs (Acinonyx jubatus) without further loss of semen quality”, published 21 June in Biological Conservation, looked at the DNA of more than 100 male cheetahs in Namibia over the past 30 years to determine how modern population declines have impacted the species genetic health. The study revealed the planet’s last stronghold of wild cheetahs is losing genetic diversity at an alarming rate. It also found, surprisingly, that wild and captive cheetahs have equally poor sperm quality, with only about 1 in 10 having what researchers consider to be ‘normal’ sperm quality.

“It’s scary to chart a three-decade decline like this within the last large remaining wild cheetah population”, said Dr Marker. “This means each and every remaining animal has the ability to impact species survival. It is imperative we maintain a healthy wild population of cheetahs in Namibia and elsewhere and capture genes of male cheetahs with good sperm, to introduce them and other beneficial traits to managed, captive populations. This underscores the need for CCF’s conservation programmes and makes our efforts to freeze and bank sperm in CCF’s Genome Resource Bank more crucial than ever”.

CCF has a long history of partnering with SCBI on projects concerning the cheetah. SCBI researchers Dr. Adrienne Crosier and Dr. Pierre Comizzoli have played significant roles in cheetah reproductive research. Along with Dr Marker, Dr. Crosier developed the methods used to viably freeze and thaw cheetah sperm, and most notably, in 2007, together with Dr. Comizzoli they produced the first in vitro cheetah embryo to survive to the blastocyst stage at CCF’s Applied Biosystems Conservation Genetics Laboratory in Namibia.

SCBI researchers also utilise CCF’s collection of biological samples in their work with captive cheetah populations in the U.S. At SCBI’s headquarters in Front Royal, Virginia, SCBI maintains a cheetah breeding centre created to support a genetically diverse and self-sustaining population in human care. Since opening in 2007, 25 surviving cubs have been born.

The lead author of the SCBI study is Dr Kim Terrell, former SCBI doctoral student and current director of research and conservation at the Memphis Zoo. Additional authors on the paper are Drs Adrienne Crosier, David Wildt and Warren Johnson at SCBI and Nicola Anthony at the University of New Orleans. Drs Wildt and Crosier also serve as scientific advisors to CCF, and Dr Crosier is the manager of the Cheetah Species Survival Plan (SSP) administered by the Association of Zoos and Aquariums, a plan Dr Marker helped develop in the mid-1980s.

“Genetic health is essential for species survival”, said Dr Wildt. “This is yet another example for the need to protect habitat as more range allows cheetahs to distribute their most valuable genes to sustain a healthy population”.

“Cheetahs have already come back from the brink of extinction once in history. We don’t know if they can do it a second time. It is crucial that wildlife institutions continue to invest in methods to complement conservation efforts in the wild”, added Dr Terrell.

On 18 Oct., Dr Marker and a member of the SCBI team will present a joint lecture in Washington, D.C, “Challenges in Cheetah Conservation,” to discuss their ongoing research partnership and the problems imperilling cheetah populations, including human-wildlife conflict, habitat loss and poor genetic health. The event is free and open to the public. Details will be posted soon at www.cheetah.org

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Contact:
Dr. Laurie Marker – Namibia
cheetah@iway.na
067 306225 or 0811247887

Susan Yannetti – USA
susan@cheetah.org
(202) 716-7756

Cheetah Conservation Fund
Cheetah Conservation Fund (CCF) is the global leader in research and conservation of cheetahs. With field headquarters in Namibia – ‘The Cheetah Capital of the World’ — CCF is dedicated to saving the remaining strongholds of cheetah populations in the wild. CCF believes that understanding the cheetah’s biology, ecology and interactions with people is essential. CCF’s strategy is a three-pronged approach integrating research, conservation and education, beginning with long-term studies to understand and monitor the factors affecting cheetah survival. Results are used to develop conservation policies and programmes, many of which include helping human populations that live alongside cheetahs. CCF works with local, national and international communities to raise awareness, communicate and educate people about the species. CCF also provides training in a number of fields to help develop livelihoods for rural Namibians.

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