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Vincent van der Merwe (1983-2025), champion of the cheetah

Vincent van der Merwe, Champion of the cheetah, died in Riyadh on March 16th, aged 42

For a species built for speed, cheetahs have run out of room. In their native Africa, they are marooned on islands of fragmented habitat, hemmed in by fences, farmland, and highways. It was Vincent van der Merwe’s unlikely task to help them find their way back to each other. Part biologist, part matchmaker, he devoted his career to keeping the bloodlines of the world’s fastest land animal flowing.

As the founder of South Africa’s Cheetah Metapopulation Initiative, van der Merwe spent a decade tracking the lineage of more than 400 cheetahs scattered across dozens of reserves. He became adept at the peculiar art of swapping cats—darting, crating, and ferrying them by helicopter or truck to new homes where unfamiliar mates awaited. It was unglamorous, often dangerous work. But it was necessary. Without his interventions, inbreeding and genetic collapse loomed.

Unlike many conservationists, van der Merwe believed in fences. The ideal of free-ranging wildlife, he argued, was no longer viable in much of Africa. Fencing created safe space—limiting conflict with humans and keeping poachers out. Yet it came at a cost: animals had to be managed like livestock. Few accepted this reality as pragmatically as he did.

His methods worked. Thanks in part to van der Merwe’s efforts, South Africa became the only country where wild cheetah numbers were rising.

That record caught the attention of India, which invited him to advise on the ambitious but fraught Project Cheetah—an attempt to restore the animal to the subcontinent after seven decades of absence. Ever forthright, van der Merwe clashed with Indian bureaucrats over secrecy and missteps. Still, he insisted the project would endure, likening its early stumbles to those South Africa had overcome.

At the time of his death he was helping Saudi Arabia attempt the same feat. Few knew better than he that saving cheetahs demanded courage, persistence, and compromise. Van der Merwe had all three.

By Rhett Ayers Butler

Rhett Ayers Butler is the Founder and CEO of Mongabay, a non-profit conservation and environmental science platform that delivers news and inspiration from Nature's frontline via a global network of local reporters. He started Mongabay in 1999 with the mission of raising interest in and appreciation of wild lands and wildlife.