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  2. Cheetah - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cheetah

    Cheetahs in the Sahara and Maasai Mara in Kenya hunt after sunset to escape the high temperatures of the day. [128] Cheetahs use their vision to hunt instead of their sense of smell; they keep a lookout for prey from resting sites or low branches. The cheetah will stalk its prey, trying to conceal itself in cover, and approach as close as ...

  3. Asiatic cheetah - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Asiatic_cheetah

    The Asiatic cheetah (Acinonyx jubatus venaticus) is a critically endangered cheetah subspecies currently only surviving in Iran. [1] Its range once spread from the Arabian Peninsula and the Near East to the Caspian region, Transcaucasus, Kyzylkum Desert and northern South Asia, but was extirpated in these regions during the 20th century.

  4. Southeast African cheetah - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Southeast_African_cheetah

    The Toyota Free State Cheetahs, founded in 1895, is a South African rugby union team that participates in the annual Currie Cup tournament. They have a cheetah running at high speed as their emblem. The Cheetahs are another South African rugby union team from Bloemfontein founded in 2005 that have a running cheetah as their emblem.

  5. Learn About Animal Habitats: A Free Downloadable Worksheet - AOL

    www.aol.com/lifestyle/learn-animal-habitats-free...

    Below is a free downloadable worksheet kids can enjoy. Just like humans have homes, animals also have places they live. The places where animals live are called habitats. Also, just as humans are ...

  6. Northeast African cheetah - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Northeast_African_cheetah

    An illustration of cheetahs from Fahhad, Abyssania by Alfred Edmund Brehm, 1895 Cynailurus soemmeringii was the scientific name proposed by Leopold Fitzinger in 1855, when he described a live male cheetah brought by Theodor von Heuglin from Sudan’s Bayuda Desert in Kordofan to Tiergarten Schönbrunn in Vienna.

  7. East African cheetah - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/East_African_cheetah

    The earliest African cheetah fossils from the early Pleistocene have been found in the lower beds of the Olduvai Gorge site in northern Tanzania. [7]Not much was known about the East African cheetah's evolutionary story, although at first, the East and Southern African cheetahs were thought to be identical as the genetic distance between the two subspecies is low. [13]

  8. Northwest African cheetah - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Northwest_African_cheetah

    The Saharan cheetah is thought to be regionally extinct in Morocco, Western Sahara, Senegal, Guinea, Guinea-Bissau, Sierra Leone, Côte d'Ivoire and Ghana. [2] In Mali, cheetahs were sighted in Adrar des Ifoghas and in the Kidal Region in the 1990s. [7] In 2010, a cheetah was photographed in Niger's Termit Massif by a camera trap. [8]

  9. Acinonyx - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Acinonyx

    Acinonyx is a genus within the Felidae family. [1] The only living species of the genus, the cheetah (A. jubatus), lives in open grasslands of Africa and Asia. [2]Several fossil remains of cheetah-like cats were excavated that date to the late Pliocene and Middle Pleistocene. [3]