
New Delhi, 08 March (H.S.): The National Tiger Conservation Authority (NTCA) confirmed that two cheetahs from Madhya Pradesh's Kuno National Park (KNP)—KP-2 and KP-3—have ventured into Rajasthan's Baran district, exemplifying natural territorial behavior documented scientifically.
KP-2 was tracked in the Mangrol range, while KP-3 traversed 60-70 km to reach Banjh Amli Conservation Reserve, both positioned approximately 6 km apart along the Parvati River banks. GPS and radio collars enable round-the-clock monitoring by an inter-state joint team, including field units from Kishanganj and Anta ranges.
NTCA anticipates such movements within the Kuno-Gandhi Sagar metapopulation landscape, reinforcing the proposed 17,000 sq km interstate wildlife corridor spanning eight Madhya Pradesh and seven Rajasthan districts. Coordinated vigilance with both states' forest departments persists, with updates forthcoming.
Notably, these India-born offspring of Namibian and South African imports mark the fifth instance of KNP cheetahs entering Rajasthan—KP-2 lingering 20 days, now joined by KP-3 in Ramgarh-Barans forests—signaling expanding territories.
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Hindusthan Samachar / Jun Sarkar