The truth about cheetah. Reputation: Cheetahs are fast, - TopicsExpress



          

The truth about cheetah. Reputation: Cheetahs are fast, super-evolved predators capable of running at really impressive speed. But they are wimps when it comes to defending a kill, relinquishing too easily to bigger, better predators like lions and hyenas. They also lose a lot of cubs to predators. In fact, they are so specialized, they deserve to go extinct. Reality: Cheetahs are fast, for sure, but exactly how fast is hotly disputed. Just as important as speed is agility. Speed and agility help explain why the cheetah is one of the most successful hunters of any carnivore. They do lose a lot of cubs to predation, but they do not deserve to go extinct. Not actually quicker than a ray of light, but still swift (Credit: Jim Zuckerman / Alamy) Not actually quicker than a ray of light, but still swift (Credit: Jim Zuckerman / Alamy) It is one of the first things a child learns about the natural world: cheetahs are fast. An eager parent might even feed a budding prodigy some context, like the fact that the cheetah is the fastest living land mammal. There might even be a temptation to put a figure on that speed. But here, it would be sensible to proceed with caution. From time to time the cheetah would drop by Just days before Jamaican sprinter Usain Bolt won the 100-metre race at the 2012 Olympics in London, Sarah (a very fast cheetah at Cincinnati Zoo) ran the same distance far faster: in a cool 5.95 seconds compared to Bolt’s lazy Olympian 9.63s. Her average speed over the distance was 16.8 metres per second and she reached a top speed of 27.3m/s. This, Cincinnati Zoo claimed, was a new world speed record. I have nothing against Sarah or Cincinnati Zoo but a little digging has turned up a reliable and rather quaint account of an even faster cheetah. The short communication appeared in the Journal of Zoology in 1997, but recounts events that took place in more than 30 years earlier in 1965. The cheetah in question had been orphaned and reared by conservationist David Hopcraft on his farm in Kenya. When she was old enough, Hopcraft released her back to the wild but from time to time she would drop by, as if paying her old friend a visit. On one of these reunions, between 10:00h and 11.30h, on firm level ground with a slight covering of murram dust, Hopcraft got this cheetah to run repeatedly over a 201.2m course measured using a surveyors tape, with a taut length of white wool tied between two posts at the start. In attendance that day was an athletics coach well used to hand-timing and armed with an analogue stopwatch. By trailing a hunk of meat from the back of a Land Rover, Hopcraft induced the cheetah to complete the course three times. Her average speed was 28.7m/s. This is much faster than Sarahs average of 16.8m/s because Sarah was timed from a standing start and Hopcrafts cheetah wasnt. But the Kenyan cheetahs average is still faster than Sarahs top speed. This is 98 kilometres per hour or, if you prefer imperial measures, 61 miles per hour. Fast. If youre hunting, it helps to be able to steer (Credit: Renato Granieri / Alamy) If youre hunting, it helps to be able to steer (Credit: Renato Granieri / Alamy) But speed isnt everything. If a cheetah is to hunt successfully, it must stick to the tail of its prey, which requires incredible maneuverability. A couple of years ago scientists fitted some wild cheetahs with nifty GPS collars capable of recording the animals hunting dynamics in unprecedented detail. This revealed extraordinary acceleration and deceleration, and some incredibly tight twists and turns. If all you could do was run fast in a straight line you wouldnt get very far if youre hunting gazelle The cheetah boasts several adaptations that help it perform such movements without losing its feet. A wild cheetah weighs around 50 kilograms and about half of this mass is devoted to its locomotor muscles. It has relatively thick bones, crucial to cope with the extreme forces experienced during high-speed maneuvers. If a cheetah needs to make an especially tight turn (often as it homes in on its prey), it will decelerate rapidly. Think superbikes on a bend. As the cheetah begins to bank, its ridged footpads and non-retractable claws help to prevent it from skidding, rather like the treads on a tyre. If all you could do was run fast in a straight line you wouldnt get very far if youre hunting gazelle, says Sarah Durant of the Zoological Society of London, who has studied cheetahs for more than 25 years. Another successful hunt (Credit: Uwe Skrzypczak / Alamy) Another successful hunt (Credit: Uwe Skrzypczak / Alamy) In this time, Durant has revealed plenty of other truths about this fleet-footed cat. For a start, cheetahs have one of the most impressive kill stats of any carnivore. In 2012, she and her colleagues revealed that of 192 chases observed in the Serengeti over almost 20 years, 114 ended in a kill. Thats a 58% success rate. Their hunting activity goes down to virtually zero if they think theres another predator around But isnt it true that cheetahs lose a lot of these kills to bigger, better predators? No, it simply isnt. It is true that a cheetah will only rarely stand up to competitors like hyenas or lions, but Durant and her colleagues have shown that cheetahs only abandon around 10% of their kills to these heavyweights. How do they pull this off? For a start, they mainly hunt during the day, when lions and hyenas are having a kip. Even then, they choose their moments carefully. When Durant played the sound of a lion roaring or hyena whooping, cheetahs instantly became wary and often moved away from the speaker – especially if they had heard a lion. They also became much less likely to hunt. Their hunting activity goes down to virtually zero if they think theres another predator around, says Durant. When cheetahs do hunt, there is still a lot they can do to avoid being robbed. After 65% of kills, they drag their prize to a more secluded, shadier spot, a precaution that prevents circling vultures from attracting unwanted attention. On average, a cheetah will move its dead prey around 60m before it takes a bite. But one individual moved its kill more than 700m. They are very good at their risk management, concludes Durant. "Sorry, how many of us did you say are going to die?" (Credit: imageBROKER / Alamy) Sorry, how many of us did you say are going to die? (Credit: imageBROKER / Alamy) Whilst cheetahs seem to be able to handle the competition with bigger predators over food, they dont do so well at protecting their own offspring, particularly in open habitats like the Serengeti. There, its estimated that only around one in five cheetah cubs survive to adolescence at 14 months. Most of the others are killed by predators, mainly lions. The dismal survival of cheetah cubs poses a direct challenge to one of the more outlandish popular myths about cheetahs: that cheetah cubs resemble vicious honey badgers in an effort to look more fierce than they are. When I first heard this, from my then six-year-old son, I told him (politely) he was talking cobblers. But he was so insistent, I plugged cheetah cub and honey badger into a search engine and what did I find? Photographs of cute, fluffy, white-backed cheetah cubs alongside what, at a glance or at a distance, might be mistaken for the notoriously ferocious honey badger or ratel. This honey badger does not look like a cheetah cub (Credit: Johan Swanepoel / Alamy) This honey badger does not look like a cheetah cub (Credit: Johan Swanepoel / Alamy) Of course, natural selection has created this kind of defensive mimicry over and over. But until someone gets permission to paint spots on the backs of baby cheetahs - which frankly seems unlikely - I am not prepared to add this to the list of truths about cheetahs. Durant is keen to correct one popular perception about cheetahs in particular. You hear quite a lot that they are evolved to the point of extinction, she says. If you are someone who idly spouts nonsense like this, please stop now: it isnt remotely true. This cheetah has clear views on your foolishness (Credit: Tambako The Jaguar, CC by 2.0) This cheetah has clear views on your foolishness (Credit: Tambako The Jaguar, CC by 2.0) Tweetable facts about cheetahs Tweet: The fastest cheetah on record ran 200 metres in just 7 seconds. Thats an average of 28.6 m/s. #TTAA @BBCEarth @WayOfThePanda Tweet: Cheetahs only abandon around 10% of their kills to bigger carnivores like lions and hyenas. #TTAA @BBCEarth @WayOfThePanda Tweet: Cheetahs often drag their prey away from the kill site, in one case over 700 metres. #TTAA @BBCEarth @WayOfThePanda Tweet: In the Serengeti, only around one in five cheetah cubs reach adolescence. #TTAA @BBCEarth @WayOfThePanda Share this story facebook Twitter Google + Email Related stories Insect The fastest insect in the world Hyena The truth about spotted hyenas Unmissable stories Discoveries The monkey that became a midwife Discoveries Brown snot spreads around world Strange & Beautiful The weird changes to autumn Battle of… What happens when ants go to war? Discoveries Octopus that strangled its lover Ads by Google Expat Living In Tanzania? £50k+ Savings? Try A Free Review To Show You The Best Interest Rates! expatsavingsreview UK Expat? £70k+ Pension? 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Posted on: Thu, 06 Nov 2014 08:49:23 +0000

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