Cheetah populations are struggling, due to human wildlife conflicts, illegal wildlife trade and habitat loss.
To prevent further cheetah population decline, CCF works with farmers to investigate, develop and implement predator-friendly livestock and wildlife management techniques. The techniques are also exhibited at CCF’s Model Farm, where the farming community can see demonstrations and complete farming coursework. CCF promotes predator-friendly livestock management solutions in farmer publications, agricultural shows, communal meetings, and within agricultural coursework at colleges and universities.
CCF began monitoring Illegal Wildlife Trade of cheetahs. CCF became a founding member of the Coalition Against Wildlife Trafficking (CAWT). While CAWT as an organization is no longer in operation, its members have branched out into focused groups around the world where they continue to work toward fighting IWT.
In the Horn of Africa, an estimated 300 cheetah cubs a year are taken from the wild to be illegally sold as pets. While in transit, the cubs commonly suffer from abuse, trauma and malnutrition – 75% of these cubs will die.
In 2001, the Cheetah Conservation Fund (CCF) and the United States Agency for International Development (USAID) collaborated to find a habitat improvement program that would be ecologically and economically viable. CCF identified a business opportunity: processing encroaching bush into high-heat, low-emission, compacted logs for use as a cooking fuel or for home heating. CCF Bush (PTY) Ltd. was established to manufacture the Bushblok product.
This loss of habitat not only reduces the available farmland, it reduces available habitat both for cheetahs and their prey species. With less usable land for humans and wildlife, human-wildlife conflict is exacerbated. Habitat loss, whether due to encroaching thornbush or human development, is consequently one of the top threats to the cheetah in the wild.
CCF is actively engaged in habitat restoration for cheetahs through its Bushblok initiative.