Yes, cheetahs are the fastest animals living at 70 mph. No, you can’t escape. Even if you try, if you’re chasing, you’ll need a car down the freeway to avoid it. And these wild cats learn to run at a very early age, even the Cubs are fast, agile, and high-energy.
The cheetah is also very sociable and makes all sorts of sounds. This is the form of their communication. They use it when hunting, laid-back, and playing, and some of those sounds are the call of mating-it also evokes biological reactions.
The December 2009 issue of the publication “Zoo Nooz” published by the San Diego Zoo Association had a great article on this. “Do You Hear What I Hear: New Breeding Protocol for Cheetahs” by Karyl Carmignani (staff writer) and an outstanding close-up photo by Ken Bohn of the award-winning zookeeper and photographer San Diego Zoo.
According to his article, the zookeeper tracks the sounds made by the cheetah and knows when males and females are ready to mate. Indeed, they have now recorded these sounds along with other sounds. And according to the article, there are many. “Rumbling, barking, growling, growling, hiss, coughing, moaning” excites women and “induces the biological function of dropping eggs” in the female part, starting the reproductive system in earnest What you do is a bark.
This is fascinating and it’s great that the San Diego Zoo can use these sounds and speakers to assist in this process. Therefore, many healthy offspring are born at the right time even in captivity. It’s amazing that the science of zoology is saving endangered species. Perhaps these techniques can be used to help other animals in the animal kingdom do the same?
Wildlife conservation is critical for species where wildlife conservation is difficult in the wild due to human invasion, hunting, and damage to the food chain from human activity. Indeed, consider all of these when thinking about wildlife conservation.
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