Los Alamos National Laboratory | Jet Propulsion Laboratory | Oak Ridge National Laboratory | Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory | Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory | Argonne National Laboratory | Brookhaven National Laboratory | Lincoln Laboratory | Applied Physics Laboratory | Cavendish Laboratory | Pacific Northwest National Laboratory | Mars Science Laboratory | Idaho National Laboratory | Ballistic Research Laboratory | United States Naval Research Laboratory | National Physical Laboratory | Marine Biological Laboratory | Air Force Research Laboratory | Rutherford Appleton Laboratory | Convention on Biological Diversity | Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory | Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory | Naval Ordnance Laboratory | Clarendon Laboratory | Carlsberg Laboratory | The Laboratory of Art and Ideas at Belmar | Radiation Laboratory | Montreal Laboratory | Global Crop Diversity Trust | European Molecular Biology Laboratory |
However, at a Cheetah reintroduction workshop organised in India on 9 September 2009, Stephen J. O'Brien from Laboratory of Genomic Diversity of National Cancer Institute, USA who has in the past conducted numerous prestigious genetic studies - including those on Asiatic lions - said that according to the latest modern genetic studies, it was discovered that the Asiatic cheetah was, in fact, genetically identical to the African Cheetah with which it had separated only about 5000 years ago.
In September 2009, Stephen J. O'Brien from the Laboratory of Genomic Diversity of the National Cancer Institute said that the Asiatic cheetah was genetically identical to the African cheetah and had separated about 5,000 years ago – not enough time for a sub-species level differentiation.
Stephen J O'Brien, world's leading conservation geneticist and Chief of the Laboratory of Genomic Diversity at the National Cancer Institute (NCI), USA, has clarified that there is no significant genetic difference between the African and the Iran's Asiatic cheetah, as per genetic research carried out by him African and Indian cheetahs were only separated just some 5,000 years ago which is not enough for a sub-species level differentiation.