Since the year 1900, cheetah footprints quickly dwindled in African dirt
as the species plummeted from more than 100,000 to fewer than 10,000. At
the Cheetah Conservation Fund's (CCF) African headquarters in Namibia,
Laurie Marker and her team save these stunning, swift, and slender
creatures from extinction. Since the organization's start in 1990,
they've rescued more than 900 cheetahs, most of whom have been returned
to the wild.
But this arduous challenge continues. For most African livestock
farmers, cheetahs are the last thing they want to see on their
properties. In the 1980s, as many as 19 cheetahs per farmer died each
year. Cheetahs were considered vermin--but, in learning more about this
magnificent species, we know this is far from true.
Today, CCF acts as a liaison between the farmers and the cheetahs, in
order to promote cohabitation in an ecosystem that cannot thrive without
the existence of the precious and predatory cheetah. On a wild ride
through the African wilderness--sometimes sniffing out scents left in
the dirt--Sy Montgomery and Nic Bishop join CCF in studying the
cheetah's ecological, genetic, and behavioral patterns in order to chase
down the fastest animal on land and save the species--before it is too
late.