Rare Breed
Can Laurie Marker help the world's fastest mammal outrun its fate?
- By Guy Gugliotta
- Photographs by Suzi Eszterhas
- Smithsonian magazine, March 2008, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 4)
The blood samples went to Stephen O'Brien at NIH. He had studied the domestic cat as a model for human viral cancers and was interested in genetic variation. In most cat species, enzymes in the blood differ genetically between individuals by 20 percent to 50 percent. But the cheetahs' blood enzymes were all alike. "We found nothing," says O'Brien, no variation at all. After looking at 52 genes, O'Brien halted the study. The cheetahs were virtual clones.
Were they catastrophically inbred? To test that hypothesis, O'Brien and Wildt needed more samples. Zookeepers had made great strides in breeding cheetahs since the three cubs died in Philadelphia, but Wildlife Safari—with Marker in charge of the cheetahs—had the most successful breeding operation in the country, with three dozen animals on hand. It would successfully raise more than 100 cheetah cubs during the 16 years Marker worked there.
In Oregon, Wildt and O'Brien took skin samples from eight Wildlife Safari cheetahs and grafted them onto other cheetahs. Ordinarily, as in human transplants, a host will reject a donor organ unless there is a close tissue match and an assist from immunosuppressant drugs. But the cheetah grafts were accepted in every case. This was disturbing news, for it meant that their immune systems were so similar that almost every cheetah in the world had the same vulnerability to the same diseases. In fact, in 1982, Wildlife Safari lost 60 percent of its cheetahs to an epidemic of viral peritonitis. "It went through the center like wildfire," Marker says. The same disease in any genetically diverse cat population could be expected to kill 2 percent to 5 percent of its victims.
Where had the cheetah gone wrong? By analyzing the few variations in cheetah DNA, O'Brien and Wildt determined that cheetahs had passed through a population "bottleneck" about 12,000 years ago. Some apocalyptic event had wiped out all but a few animals that then interbred, with disastrous consequences for the animal's gene pool. The obvious culprit was the onset of the last ice age, a cold snap that coincided with the extinction of saber-toothed cats, mastodons and other large prehistoric mammals. Fossil evidence shows that cheetahs evolved in North America about 8.5 million years ago and then spread throughout Asia, India, Europe and Africa; the modern species appeared about 200,000 years ago. The bottleneck wiped out all of North America's animals.
Wildt, O'Brien and Marker's National Zoo-led studies have informed everything that has happened in cheetah management and conservation since the 1980s. Researchers now know that the cheetah will not be a robust, vigorous species anytime in the foreseeable future and that saving the animals, Marker's proclaimed goal, thus requires a combination of strategies. Protecting and studying them in the wild is one approach, while at the same time scientists are refining techniques to breed them in captivity, hoping to build what Wildt calls an insurance policy for the wild population. The work continues today at the new Cheetah Science Facility in Front Royal, Virginia.
Marker, by then divorced, moved to Washington in 1988 to run the National Zoo's program to broaden genetic analysis in breeding cheetahs and other animals. She spent three years there before shedding her worldly goods and moving to Namibia. She sold what she could—including her mobile home in Oregon—gave away most of the rest and departed with $15,000.
"I thought if I told enough people about the threat to cheetahs, they would take care of it, but they never did," Marker says. "[People] were always saying, ‘somebody ought to do something about cheetahs,' but I could never find out who ‘somebody' was. So I went."
Marker arrived in namibia at a watershed moment. Colonized by Germany in the 19th century and annexed by apartheid South Africa after World War I, the country known as South West Africa became an international cause in the 1960s as the guerrilla South West Africa People's Organization (SWAPO) fought to end colonialism. In 1988, South Africa agreed to vacate Namibia, and the country gained independence in March 1990. Marker arrived April 1, 1991. "At first there was a lot of standoffishness, especially among the white folks," she recalls. "I was a U.S. citizen, and we had supported SWAPO, which, as far as they were concerned, was the wrong side."
With two million people living in an area nearly twice the size of California, Namibia is one of the least populated countries on earth; a motorist can drive 100 miles without seeing more than a half-dozen people. And the countryside teems with wildlife. Troops of jeering baboons greet motorists along the highway leading north from Windhoek, the capital. Families of wart hogs snuffle through the underbrush, and bushy-tailed jackals lurk in the grass. At water holes even a casual visitor can be confident of seeing a suite of marvelous creatures—eland, kudu, oryx, hartebeest. In all, Namibia boasts more than 20 species of antelope.
The cheetah is a top-of-the-line predator on the high plains. But, as Marker notes, cheetahs are one-trick cats. They can run down and kill anything their own size, or considerably bigger if they hunt together, but their legendary burst of speed—up to 70 miles per hour—is good for only about a quarter of a mile, and the chase leaves them badly winded and vulnerable. Bigger, nastier opportunists—lions, leopards and hyenas—frequently steal cheetah kills and, for good measure, then kill the exhausted cheetah's young.
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Comments (35)
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Because they were genetically designed. Thats why they are carbon copies. Perhaps, they were spliced with the greyhound parts of the wold genome and Cat genes.
Posted by sean on March 6,2012 | 12:56 PM
I had the good fortune of meeting Laurie through a mutual friend in the mid-1980's while she was working at the Wildlife Safari in Winston, Oregon. Laurie took us on a behind-the-scenes tour of the park. We were able to play with Khayam, the park's famous cheetah, and later took a behind-the-scenes tour of the park in a passenger van. I got to sit in the back of the van and hug Khayam during the tour. It was really quite a thrill. Laurie was featured in the July/August 2003 Best Friends magazine concerning her work in Namibia. It's nice to have an update 5 years later about her continued success there.
Posted by Tom Barton on November 7,2008 | 05:11 PM
CCF is being recognized by the Tech awards in November for their Bushblok project. Check it out on the website www.Cheetah.org. Somone wanted to know her parents names. I am Lauries mother. Marline Bushey. Her father is Ralph Bushey We are still married after 60 years, and live in California. We think she is fatastic. Her programs are very innovative and have been copied all over the world. Her motto "WE CAN LIVE TOGETHER" is an inspiration for the world to adhere to.
Posted by Marline on October 10,2008 | 05:20 PM
Hello, I love this article, but I was wondering if anyone knows Dr Laurie Marker's mother and father's name? Thanks, Tanzi :-)
Posted by Tanzi on August 25,2008 | 12:16 AM
I did this magazine article for a report .
Posted by gabby on July 27,2008 | 07:03 PM
What a fascinating article - am visiting CCF Namibia in 2 weeks as an Earthwatch volunteer. Though I'm passionate about wildlife I don't know too much about cheetahs so am expecting to learn quite a lot. Can't wait to do my bit!
Posted by Trevor on April 28,2008 | 04:39 AM
What a wonderful article, it makes me envy Ms. Marker. My daughter, Karen who is an about to be retired teacher this June, e-mailed this to me, I can't thank her enough!! She is a great animal lover and has been since early childhood, she has always had several animals, including her horse. She volunteers at the Wolf Center near Julian, California and loves the wolves. Its great to know we have compassionate people like Ms. Marker that care for our wild-life. I would like to see more articles about her and her work with the Cheetahas. With admiration and thanks, B. Arnds
Posted by B. Arnds on April 23,2008 | 03:51 AM
A fantastic and inspiring article, it is because of reading about people like Laurie that I packed in my job at the age of 44 to study for a degree in wildlife conservation - I am just finishing my second year and have never looked back - I love africa, in partic South Africa and once I have my degree will be looking to to find work in the conservation of africa big cats - my dissertation will be based on Cheetahs which I am will be researching at a reserve in KwaZulu Natal. Once the research is finished I am hoping to get a plane to Namibia to visit CCF. Good luck and best wishes to all at CCF and hope to see you soon Malcolm
Posted by Malcolm Truman on April 19,2008 | 04:02 AM
This is an amazing resource for big cat preservation. What an awesome cause to devote your entire life too. I caught a glimpse of the CCF in the Apr. 2008 Conde Nast Traveler while looking for a good vacation. I am off for the next few months and cannot wait to visit and work with the Cheetahs (my favorite animal). I am hoping to be there in July or Aug 2008. See you then Laurie!!
Posted by shane tyler on April 13,2008 | 02:59 AM
very well dont to everyone who helped. i am very interested with animals and i alwaysed loved cats. i am 12 but i think i will support cheetahs and other animals when im older. thank again and thank you for making this article
Posted by Jade on April 12,2008 | 10:58 AM
I knew Laurie when she was just starting out at Wildlife Safari in Winston, Oregon. She was just as dedicated then, and I really want her to know that some of us are still following her life and her work - good job Laurie! Whenever I drive through the Hwy 42 Interchange, I look at the Cheetah Statue and remember....
Posted by Rise Briggs on April 2,2008 | 02:36 PM
This is absolutely amazing work. I have loved wildlife every since I can remember but I don't know what I can do to help. I really admire all that you do and now I'm going to get involved!!
Posted by Cara Coughlin on March 24,2008 | 05:56 PM
It is wonderful to see Dr. Marker's work with the Cheetahs being recognized in the Smithsonian Magazine. She has probably done more to help these unique animals survive than anyone. This article shows much that she has accomplished, but is only a small part of what she has done to raise awareness and educate everyone about the cheetahs. You must spend some time at CCF to really appreciate her contribution and dedication to the cheetahs. There is no one like Laurie, no one who has done what she has done in Namibia.
Posted by Richard Klingensmith on March 21,2008 | 10:14 PM
Laura! Congratulations on a great article! So proud of you and your work!! Our Best from San Francisco, Scott and Terry
Posted by Terry Gross on March 17,2008 | 11:51 PM
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