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27 Interesting Cheetah Facts You Might Not Know

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Cheetahs are the fastest land animals. This is one of the well-known cheetah facts that is sometimes disputed. Ok, we know that the Peregrine Falcon can fly at speeds of over 200 miles per hour, but the cheetah is still the fastest animal moving over the ground, and is twice as fast as the fastest human!

These large cats were once domesticated in Asia, where the Asiatic cheetah is now critically endangered. In Africa, there are more cheetahs, but a lack of genetic diversity and threats to their habitat are putting increasing pressure on African cheetah populations.

Here are 27 interesting Cheetah Facts

cheetah in africa

27 Interesting Cheetah Facts

1. Cheetahs Are The Fastest Animals on Land

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The most well-known of interesting facts about cheetahs can also be the most confusing of cheetah facts. When people say that the cheetah is the fastest land animal, this doesn’t mean that it is the fastest-moving member of the animal kingdom. The cheetah is the fastest moving animal on Earth, depending on how each person defines an animal. This is where the confusion comes from.

First, let’s establish the most important of cheetah facts: how fast they can run. A cheetah can run up to 75 miles per hour, or up to 120 kilometers per hour!

This is where one of the most confusing cheetah facts comes from because there are in fact other animals on Earth that move faster. However, although these other fast animals are members of the animal kingdom, they aren’t technically classified as land animals.

For instance, the Peregrine Falcon is the fastest bird, and can attain speeds of over 200 miles per hour, or over 350 kilometers per hour! The Peregrine Falcon achieves these speeds in a long dive, from high in the sky, which it uses to catch its prey.

In the ocean, black marlin can reach speeds up to 80 miles per hour, or over 120 kilometers per hour! This makes the black marlin the fastest recorded fish.

To settle any arguments over the fastest animal, it’s best to simply say that there are plenty that can move faster than humans! For the record, a cheetah is easily twice as fast as the fastest human on Earth today, Usain Bolt, who reached speeds over 27 miles per hour during part of a sprint.

2. Cheetahs in Asia Were Used for Hunting Like Greyhounds

cheetah in africa with kill group interesting cheetah facts

Cheetahs live mostly in Africa, and when we think of a cheetah, the image that usually comes to mind is of a cheetah chasing its prey in the grasslands of Africa. This image is not far off the truth, as the majority of cheetahs do live in Sub-Saharan Africa.

However, there are also a small number of cheetahs living in Iran, and some accounts of cheetahs living in Pakistan. There were also once cheetahs in India, Iraq, Israel, Russia, Saudi Arabia and more countries.

Cheetahs rely on an abundance of prey to survive. As their habitat was threatened, they were poached, and their prey diminished, Asiatic cheetahs dwindled in number.

Asiatic cheetahs, which are a distinct subspecies from African cheetahs, were once tamed and used as hunting animals, much like greyhounds. The animals were used in India by royalty during colonial times and were known as the hunting leopard.

3. Asiatic Cheetahs and African Cheetahs are Two Different Animals

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When scientists examined the DNA of Asiatic cheetahs and African cheetahs, they learned that they were two separate subspecies. There may only be 40 to 70 Asiatic cheetahs left in the world. Because they are a separate subspecies, they are classified as Critically Endangered.

African cheetahs are far greater in number, but still face pressures from diminishing habitats and food supplies. African cheetahs are listed as Vulnerable on the Endangered Species list.

The cheetah’s beautiful and striking fur is something that people have admired for a long time. As a result of this, poaching threatens cheetahs in Africa. The practice continues despite efforts by conservationists to protect cheetahs in the wild.

4. Cheetahs Can Weigh Up to 150 Pounds

Big cats include lions, tigers, and leopards. While this is not a technical classification, the closest evolutionary relatives to cheetahs are pumas and jaguars.

Cheetahs are not always included with the other big cats, because they aren’t as large as lions or tigers. However, they are much bigger than your average house cat.

Some cheetahs can weigh up to 150 pounds, or over 70 kilograms. Cheetahs are also very long. Cheetahs can measure nearly 5 feet, or up to 150cm, in length from their head to the beginning of their tail.

Cheetah’s tails can be nearly 3 feet long, or over 80cm long. Taking these measurements together makes some cheetahs nearly 8 feet long, or over 230cm long, from their nose to the tip of their tail.

It may not be the king of the jungle, but a cheetah can be up to 3 feet, or nearly one meter, tall at the shoulder.

5. Cheetahs Purr Like House Cats

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When cheetahs are happy, mostly during meetings between cubs and mothers, they will purr. They also make a wide range of other noises.

From chirping to hissing and growling, cheetahs are very vocal animals. Cheetahs use their vocalizations to communicate with each other and to scare away predators.

6. The Cheetah is a Racing Machine With Turbo-Charged Lungs and Heart

cheetah in africa group of 3

When scientists tested cheetahs from all over Africa, they found that there was not a great variety in their genetic code. While members of a species always share a good deal of genetic code, they should have enough diversity in their genes to allow for certain members of the population to adapt to changes in the environment.

Part of the reason that cheetahs do not have great genetic diversity is that they are such specialized animals. One of the special traits that evolution has provided the cheetah with is an incredible circulatory system to fuel its speed.

Their hearts and lungs are much larger than is strictly necessary for their body. When sprinting to catch prey, the cheetah’s lungs and heart turn the cheetah into a supercharged and turbo-powered animal on the move.

Scientists also believe that the genetic similarities of cheetahs may be the result of environmental factors, or a period of inbreeding some time in the evolution of cheetahs. Because cheetahs do not have a great deal of genetic diversity, they are more sensitive to changes in their environment, which can make them vulnerable.

Changes in the environment affect all cheetahs in more or less the same way. This lack of genetic diversity is another reason that the Asiatic cheetah is a critically endangered species.

7. Cheetahs Are Carnivores

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Cheetahs, like other big cats, are carnivores. They eat a diet made up exclusively of meat. It’s the incredible sprinting speed of the cheetah that allows it to catch prey.

Some of the animals that cheetahs hunt are quite fast themselves. Gazelle, which are often the prey of cheetahs, can run up to 50 miles per hour, or up to 80 kilometers per hour.

Cheetahs have evolved over time so they can hunt these very fast animals. And cheetahs hunt by day, while most other cats hunt by night.

Cheetahs rely on their eyesight as their primary sense for hunting, while other cats have a greater reliance on smell. For cheetahs, it’s all about spotting their prey and chasing it down.

When a cheetah kills its prey, it usually does so through strangulation. In addition to gazelles, cheetahs hunt impala, hares, and other game. Cheetahs will also hunt larger animals, like zebras. When cheetahs hunt larger game, they typically hunt in groups and typically hunt younger, older, or sick members of the larger animal populations.

8. Male Cheetah Hunting Groups Are Formed by Siblings

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While some house cats can have an air of indifference, cheetahs are very sociable animals. This is not to say that cheetahs socialize with humans. We have mentioned that some Asiatic cheetahs were domesticated.

Adult male cheetahs typically hunt in groups. These groups are often made up of brothers. Sometimes, lone cubs will form groups together, or join one of these sibling groups.

Female adult cheetahs are typically more solitary; however, sometimes mother and daughter groups form. Female cheetahs spend most of their time hunting and caring for their cubs.

9. Cheetah Cubs Have a Mantle of Hair to Disguise Them from Predators

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Cheetahs and their moms share a special bond. The cheetah mothers do most of the raising of the cubs. They nurse the cubs, protect them, and teach them how to hunt.

Cheetah cubs have a row of hair on their back when they are born. This ridge of hair is called a mantle, and it’s speculated that cheetah cubs are born with this to confuse predators. Scientists think the cheetah cubs’ mantle makes them look like honey badgers, which discourages predators.

Cheetah cubs need all the protection they can get. While adult cheetahs are not often preyed upon due to their fast speed, larger cats, wild dogs, hyenas, and even eagles often prey upon cheetah cubs.

It’s one of the sad cheetah facts that as a result of this, the mortality rate for cheetah cubs is very high. Cheetah cubs face a 40% mortality rate on average at birth and the mortality rate within certain populations can be up to 90%.

After the mother has raised her cubs, she will let them go off into the wild. For a short time, the brothers and sisters will stay together. Then, the sister cubs will leave to form a home range and the brother cubs will form a hunting group that they will stay with for the rest of their life.

10. Male and Female Cheetahs Live Separately

Cheetahs do not live as mating couples, and a study of cheetahs on the Serengeti showed that cheetah females are very promiscuous.

The male groups, or solitary male cheetahs, will mark out a territory that overlaps several female home ranges. Male cheetahs are very territorial and fights over territory often result in severe injury or death.

Female cheetahs form a home range and typically hunt alone, except when teaching their cubs how to hunt. Female home ranges will often overlap, most typically with members of the female cheetah’s family. For instance, a female cheetah’s home range may overlap with those of her sister and daughter.

As habitats are threatened, this reduces the ranges and territories for cheetahs and cheetah groups. The increasing competition for prey and propagation further endangers cheetahs.

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11. Cheetahs have a distinctive paw print.

A cheetah’s claws are semi-retractable. This allows them to maintain grip when they travel at high speeds. This also means that it is easy to identify a Cheetah paw print as they have a distinctive claw mark on the toe.

12. A cheetah’s tail helps it balance when it is moving at high speeds.

13. Cheetahs like it hot but they don’t like deserts.

About half of the world’s cheetah population is in Southern Africa. Cheetahs like dry, hot climates but they don’t like deserts or tropical heat. Savannahs and dry forests are where cheetahs are most often found in countries like Namibia, Botswana and South Africa.

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14. Cheetah’s don’t have homes

Cheetahs don’t have dens or burrows or any type of “home”. They rest under trees or in tall grass.

15. A group of cheetahs is known as a coalition

Other than lions, cheetahs are the only wild cats that live in groups and they tend to be groups of brothers known as coalitions.

16. Cheetahs usually live between 10 and 12 years in the wild.

They can survive up to 20 years when in captivity.

17. Cheetahs don’t like to climb

Unlike leopards, a cheetah’s paws, claws, and ankles are designed to run fast on the ground, not for climbing. Cheetahs are therefore most often found on the ground whilst leopards tend to be found in trees. Cheetahs still use trees but as lookout points.

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18. The name cheetah comes from Hindi

Specifically, the word cheetah means “spotted one” in Hindi. Each cheetah cat has a unique spot pattern but not every cheetah has spots. In rare cases, there are king cheetahs that tend to have blotches rather than spots. The purpose of the spots is camouflage.

19. Cheetahs like their space

Cheetahs can roam areas of up to 3,000 square kilometers. They prefer areas where there are fewer prey animals in terms of density as this also means less competition with other big predators like lions.

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20. Cheetahs tire fast

Going as fast as they do when on the hunt really wipes a cheetah out. Cheetahs can generally only run at high speeds for about 300 metres and if they haven’t caught their prey within one minute they tend to need to stop and rest.

21. Cheetahs eat fast

After a kill, a cheetah generally takes its prey to a quiet spot and eats it quickly. This is so they don’t lose their prey to lions or hyenas. As they hunt during the day they don’t get as hassled by other predators as they would at night.

22. Cheetahs mate all year round.

Cheetahs don’t have a set time of year when they mate. Cheetah pregnancies normally last just three months and their litters produce between 2 and 4 cubs.

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23. Cheetah mums and cubs move around a lot

A cheetah with cubs will move every few days to protect its young. Once a cub has reached 5 or 6 weeks it will start to follow its mother and may start consuming some of its mother’s kills.

24. Hunting starts young in cubs

A cheetah cub will generally start hunting once it reaches 12 months of age. At 15 months cubs head out on their own or find a mate.

25. Cheetahs can go several days without water

Cheetahs have adapted to their dry, warm surroundings and can go for three or four days without water. However, they do need some liquid and tend to get their hydration needs met by their kills.

26. Cheetahs start reproducing young

Male cheetahs can impregnate females from one year of age. Female cheetahs can begin giving birth at two years of age. Cheetahs aren’t really into long-term relationships. Pairing is random depending on location and most cheetahs will have many different partners in their lifetime.

27. A cheetah is the only big cat that can turn in mid-air when sprinting.

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Interesting Facts about Giraffes

Interesting Facts about Zebras

Ingrid

Thursday 12th of May 2022

Two of your images are of leopards, not cheetahs.

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