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Dogs cross species barrier, help cheetahs survive

6 min read
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Shiley, a 3-year-old male cheetah, and Yeti, a female Anatolian shepherd who serves as Shiley’s partner, take a break outside the elephant enclosure during a walkthrough at Safari Park in Escondido, Calif.

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Johari, a 3-year-old female cheetah, chases after a mechanized toy during a performance on the Cheetah Run.

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Keeper Shannon Smith gets a lick from Shiley at Safari Park.

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Cheetah keepers Shannon Smith, left, Kim Hanley, second from left, walk Shiley, a male cheetah 3-and-half-years -old, while Larissa Combs, lead cheetah keeper, walks Yeti, a female Anatolian shepherd, during an animal ambassador walk through Safari Park in Escondido, Calif.

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Makena, a 7-year-old female cheetah, maneuvers through a tree keeping a close watch on a stranger in the cheetah breeding facility at Safari Park in Escondido, Calif. Ch

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Nairobi, a 9-year-old female cheetah, keeps an eye on activity in an adjacent enclosure at the cheetah breeding facility at Safari Park in Escondido, Calif.

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ohari, a three-and-half-year-old female cheetah, chases after a toy during a performance on the Cheetah Run at Safari Park in Escondido, Calif.

LOS ANGELES – It may sound like a West Side Story-style love story, but some dogs love big cats.

Cheetahs are the fastest mammals in the world, but they also are the world’s biggest scaredy-cats – so much so that they don’t breed easily and are in danger of going extinct.

Some zoos are introducing dogs to calm the skittish cats and bring attention to their plight. They’re pairing “companion dogs” with some cheetahs to serve as playmates and to provide the cats with guidance.

“It’s a love story of one species helping another species survive,” said Jack Grisham, vice president of animal collections at the St. Louis Zoo and species survival plan coordinator for cheetahs in North America.

Or, to quote Stephen Stills, it’s a matter of loving the one you’re with, he said.

“It is all about comforting and reassuring the cheetah,” said Janet Rose-Hinostroza, animal training supervisor at the San Diego Zoo Safari Park — the top U.S. breeder of cheetahs in captivity. In the past 40 years, 135 cheetahs have been born at the park’s breeding facility.

The cheetahs most often found at zoos and wildlife parks are not considered good breeding candidates, they don’t relate well to other cheetahs, or they are abandoned by their mothers, Rose-Hinostroza said. But they seem to take easily to companion dogs and look to the dogs for play and example.

Of the 19 cheetahs at Safari Park, four have dogs. Four of the zoo’s cheetahs also have dogs.

The dogs, usually from animal shelters, and cheetah pups generally are introduced when they are about 3 months old.

“In this relationship, the dog is dominant, but we look for dogs that want to be a buddy,” Rose-Hinostroza said. “The dog always has the cat’s back, but it’s never the other way around. Dogs worry about their cats. They protect their cats.”

One of the most popular draws at Safari Park is the 100-meter cheetah run where the public gets to see firsthand the speed of “nature’s perfect sprinter.”

“Speed is incredibly important. It is their survival technique, in a nutshell,” Rose-Hinostroza said. “If they can’t run, they won’t survive. They are not equipped to be confrontational.”

A cheetah’s claws don’t retract, so they have footing that takes them from “zero to 60 in 3.4 seconds,” she said.

“That’s faster than every single car on the market, and it only takes three steps,” Rose-Hinostroza said.

Cheetahs use their tails like a rotor to balance while they are running. Their top speed is 60 to 70 mph, based on size, but they can run that fast only for 20 or 30 seconds. Extending that to a minute or more puts the animal in serious jeopardy of death.

“Overexertion, heat exhaustion can literally cook their organs at that speed,” Rose-Hinostroza said. She added the average cheetah chase in the wild is 200 to 300 meters.

Safari Park’s cheetahs chase a lure for 100 meters, a sprint that seldom exceeds 6 seconds.

A century ago there were 100,000 cheetahs in the wild, Grisham said. Today there are fewer than 12,000. The species has become extinct in at least 13 countries. There are about 280 captive cheetahs in zoos across the United States.

As captive efforts to save the species continue, Grisham worries there is no wild to send them home to because habitat is being swallowed up by developers and poachers are killing the cats for their fur.

Cheetahs live 12 to 15 years in captivity. Males weigh 120 to 150 pounds, and females 100 to 120 pounds.

The dogs come in all sizes. At Safari Park, the smallest and sweetest is Hopper, a male mutt who weighs 40 pounds. He’s teamed with Amara, the toughest female cheetah on the team, Rose-Hinostroza said.

Cheetah females don’t go into heat like other cats. Instead, they have to be brought into estrus by a male cheetah, the experts explained. That’s why breeding is so hard – because they aren’t social animals, they live independently, and they seldom hang out with one another.

Although the dogs and cats live together, they are not always with one another. Dogs have play dates with other dogs and humans. Mealtimes always are spent apart. The dogs eat kibble, and the cheetahs eat steak.

“The dogs are the bosses in these relationships,” Rose-Hinostroza said. “If they ate together there would be one really fat dog and a really skinny cheetah.”

One of Safari Park’s dogs – the only non-shelter dog – is Yeti, an Anatolian shepherd. She works with two cheetahs – Johari and her brother Shiley.

No one is sure when the idea of cheetah dogs started, but Anatolian shepherds helped advance it. The San Diego Zoo was given a pair of cheetahs in 1981 on the condition they be given dogs because they were used to them.

A few decades ago, Dr. Laurie Marker, founder and executive director of the Cheetah Conservation Fund in the southern African nation of Namibia, brought Anatolian shepherds from Turkey and raised them to protect area goat herds.

“The Anatolian shepherd weighs up to 150 pounds and isn’t afraid of anything,” Grisham said. “They’ll square off against lions and leopards. They don’t always win, but they are very protective.

“Marker gave the dogs to farmers to protect their herds,” Grisham said. When cheetahs came looking for dinner, the dogs scared the cats away and saved the farmer’s goats. At the same time, the dogs saved the cats from being killed by the farmers. There was plenty of other food in the wild for the cats, including gazelles, impalas, springhares, birds, warthogs, kudu and hartebeest.

The dogs have helped cheetah conservation in Africa. “For the first time in 30 years, the cheetah population in the wild is on the rise because ranchers don’t have to shoot them anymore. They don’t need to shoot them. The dog is that effective at keeping the cheetah away from the herd,” Rose-Hinostroza said.

Not every zoo that breeds cheetahs uses dogs. The St. Louis Zoo, where Grisham is based, has seven cheetahs but does not use dogs. More than 30 cubs have been born at that zoo.

Visitors can still watch the skittish cats and learn what all the fuss is about, Grisham said.

“It helps us understand the plight of animals in nature. In Africa, cheetahs were treated as vermin for years, like people in the United States treat coyotes,” Grisham said.

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