Subira

a Cheetah
Subira the cheetah was
born September 22, 1993 at the Winston, Oregon Wildlife Safari. She only has
three legs. While in the womb, her umbilical cord wrapped around her right hind
leg, cutting off the circulation. The leg never developed properly and had to be
amputated. Since it would have been impossible to leave her with others of her
kind, she came to live at the Shambala Preserve in July, 1994.
For several hundred yards, the cheetah (acinonyx
jubatus) can travel faster than any other land animal, reaching speeds in
the vicinity of seventy miles per hour. Even Subuira on her three legs has been
clocked at thirty-five miles an hour! The coat of the cheetah is yellowish and
tawny in color with markings that consist of round black spots, and two black
"tear lines" that run from its large, beautiful brown eyes to its
mouth.
The body is quite slim, and the tail, useful in
navigating, is more than half the length of the head and body. The weight of the
average male is about 125 pounds, with the female slightly smaller. The shoulder
height of the cheetah can reach 30 inches. The length from nose to tail tip is
from 6 to 7 feet. Although the cheetah is now classified as a big cat, it cannot
roar. Cheetahs purr--very loudly. Subira can be heard the length and
breadth of Shambala's lakeside picnic area when she chooses. The cheetah is also
the only cat of any size that cannot retract its claws; it is believed that
these claws work much like cleats on a track shoe to push the animal off to a
fast start.
The territory occupied by
cheetahs in Africa has dwindled. Once, abundant in South Africa, cheetahs are
now reduced to scattered pockets there, chiefly in scattered sanctuaries - Only
in Kenya, Tanzania, and adjacent parts of East Africa do cheetahs remain in
significant numbers, and still they are only a fragment of those that existed in
the past. Latest estimates put the cheetah population between 1,000 and 1,500 in
the wild. Habitat destruction, very little genetic diversity, and excessive
hunting for the cheetah's lovely spotted pelt have caused it to vanish from much
of its original range, which once covered most of Africa and the Middle East.
Cheetahs have not been seen in India, for example, since 1951.
All of us at Shambala
would like to join Subira in thanking you for your kind and generous support.
Would you like to
"adopt" Subira, or one of our other "Wild Ones?"
Check out our exciting "Adopt-a-Wild
One" program!