@Mbwamwitu My source for the cheetah info is NOT my friend who founded Fishing Cat Conservancy (though he is from India). It is actually someone much higher up in Indian conservation circles. I did not speak to him directly, but a close relative took him on a mammal watching tour in parts of the USA and relayed the conversation to me.
I find it surprising you question the historic range of Asiatic cheetahs in India. The importation of African cheetahs for coursing was only in the latter years of the sport because the native Indian (Asiatic) cheetahs were no longer available. The story is well documented in the excellent book The End of a Trail: The Cheetah in India.
Oh wow, in that case I'm even more interested than before. I'd be super interested in hearing any further insights you got from them. My understanding is that there is diversity among the high-ups in which some are extremely keen on the cheetah project to create a flagship conservation project for grasslands (which I dig very much) while others would prefer that more focus be given to the existing challenges of strengthening PA connectivity or mitigating the impact of infrastructure on non-protected wilderness.
I don't question the existence of a native range in India - although there are some conservationists like Valmik Thapar who do. He even questions the historic range of the lion but I find the cheetah arguments a little more convincing, although to be clear I am still with the 99% of folks who believe that both species were native to the subcontinent. Valmik's book is Exotic Aliens: The Lion and the Cheetah in India.
What I'm saying is that we don't have reliable scientific records on the specificities of cheetah existence in India. What were population densities like? How did those differ between semiarid grassland in Gujarat and open scrub forest in Madhya Pradesh? How do those numbers interact with those of threatened ground birds, wolves, hyenas, etc.? Maybe it's not that relevant. I'm not an expert, ofc. Just hoping that the experts take this stuff into account because often in India that is not the case. And this is all the ecological stuff before we even get into the very persistent social and economic considerations in a country with as many humans as mine.
I'll check out the book, thanks for the rec. I've actually met the author - went to the launch of his book on Indian lions as a kid!
EDIT: also, my point about the import of cheetahs still stands, I think. I was saying that it is difficult to know much about the ecology of wild cheetahs in India because the import as well as the use of semi-domesticated indigenous cheetahs muddies already muddy waters. I'm not concerned with the subspecific purity stuff, just the fact that reintroducing India's cheetahs is littered with unknowns.
Like, it's not similar to reintroducing rhinos to parts of their African range where they went extinct a decade or two ago. It's not even similar to reintroducing North American large carnivores to habitat that these species (i) inhabited much more recently, (ii) were even slightly better studied in, (iii) can draw inferences from slightly similar source habitat. And that is before we even consider the human element which is unprecedented in India.
It just feels to me like the Indian cheetah reintroduction would be among if not the most experimental (bordering on fantastical) in the world, for many reasons. And I hope we're ready for such a large experiment.
Last edited: