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How sperm bank for cheetahs might one day save fastest land animal

For 35 years, scientists have been banking cheetah sperm in Namibia as a last-resort plan to protect the species, whose population has plunged to under 7,000 worldwide

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Image for representational purpose only. Photo Courtesy: File pic

Image for representational purpose only. Photo Courtesy: File pic

For 35 years, American zoologist Laurie Marker has been collecting and storing specimens in a cheetah sperm bank in Namibia, hoping conservationists never have to use them.

But she worries that the world's fastest land animal might be on the brink of extinction one day and need artificial reproduction to save it.

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