SWCCF 2026 03

SWCCF 2026 03

This report highlights several community-focused initiatives designed to protect endangered small wild cats by improving local livelihoods. In Uganda and India, conservation groups are helping residents transition from forest exploitation to sustainable beekeeping, organic gardening, and animal husbandry. Similar efforts in Nepal provide greenhouses to high-altitude villages, where residents protect clouded leopards in exchange for food security. The text also celebrates the creation of International Rusty-Spotted Cat Day to foster global awareness for the world's smallest feline. Finally, it recognizes the Fundación Con Garra in Chile for their successful campaign to reduce wildlife-vehicle collisions. Together, these accounts demonstrate that protecting biodiversity is most effective when it is paired with economic empowerment and cultural respect.

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SWCCF News 2025 10

SWCCF News 2025 10

Explore three inspiring wild cat conservation stories: Jim Sanderson's encounter with the world's only captive Marbled cat in India, the creation of the first Community Conserved Area for Marbled Cats in Arunachal Pradesh, Uganda's new national park for African Golden Cats, and how young students are transforming Fishing cat conservation along India's Chilika lagoon. Community-led conservation is changing the future for rare and threatened wild cats.

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SWCCF News 2025 09

SWCCF News 2025 09

Everywhere we work, we install traffic signs.  We have traffic signs in Sri Lanka depicting the Fishing cat, in Mongolia depicting the Manul, in India featuring the Rusty-Spotted cat, and Mexico with several species including the Jaguar.  The above traffic signs in Chile depict all seven wild cat species found in Chile, from the diminutive Guigna to the Puma.

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