Kenya

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Mara-Naboisho Lion Project

https://www.facebook.com/MaraNaboishoLionProject

 

Today is a really sad day for the Mara Lion Project. Nashipai. The first lioness that was collared in October last year, has been killed, most likely by the means of poison.

As Nashipai had 3 dependent 7 month old cubs, they have killed four lions.

I am filled with deep frustration, sadness and anger. For some of the Maasai, there is absolutely zero tolerance, and as Nashipai had killed a young cow (from finding bones), they apparently did not hesitate to immediately put out poison.

We will do our best to catch the perpetrators.

 

 

The lions of Kenya have been predicted to vanish by 2028. A major cause for such dramatic losses is the high level of human-lion conflict.

Lion Guardians are a wonderful organisation assisting and empowering local Maasai to peacefully live alongside these predators.

Each Lion Guardian is provided with thorough training in lion ecology, behaviour and the use of telemetry tracking equipment.

The team then assign each warrior with a collared lion to monitor and track. By doing so they are able to warn local communities of approaching lions thus preventing any livestock losses and lion deaths.

Please consider them when fundraising on World Lion Day (10th August). Read more here:
http://worldlionday.com/associates/

 

WHO TO SUPPORT
worldlionday.com
The following organizations and individuals are active in lion conservation, research or activities that benefit lions, and need your support to continue their work.
 

 

 

Big Life Foundation
https://www.facebook.com/biglifefoundation
 

“THE MAASAI ARE HUNTING LIONS

by Jeremy Goss, May 20 2013

(Jeremy is a scientist living in the Big Life patroled-area for three months to assess the attitudes and behaviour of the local community towards predators, how this has changed over the past decade, and exactly what the impact of the Big Life/MPT Predator Compensation Scheme has been.)

(THIS STORY RELATES TO A PREVIOUS INCIDENT A COUPLE OF MONTHS AGO)

The radio crackles, a dusty message. Not good news – the Maasai are hunting lions.

The cats have reportedly broken into a boma overnight and killed 40 shoats (sheep/goats) and a cow. The loss is devastating to the family involved. In anticipation, Big Life Foundation has already sent rangers to the spot to monitor the mood, and the latest message ignites a flurry of action.

I join a team of rangers in the back of a Land Cruiser. They’re involved in a fight with deep emotional triggers, and one in which it is hard to take sides. In this pastoralist society, livestock are wealth, and predators have the ability to wreck livelihoods. Retribution can be swift. The rangers joke nervously. The information so far has been vague and the outcome is unpredictable.

We race through the dense bush of the Chyulu Hills and accelerate as we hit the vast yellow plains below.

After an hour’s travel, we arrive. The rangers fan out, led by two men from a boma nearby. Eventually a shout from below, and a sad find. A young lioness, killed by Maasai spears. Her claws, tail and ears are gone, prizes for those most instrumental in her death.

To the men involved, this killing is a form of the revenge, but also represents one less lion threatening their livestock. There is no right or wrong here, and as we turn, the only hope is that the death of one lion will be the end of this particular incident.

But movement in the distance signals that this is not over. A line of forty Maasai men is heading in the direction in which the rest of the pride had fled.

To try to stop them would not only be pointless, but dangerous too. The group is angry, probably irrationally so, and all carry long spears. The rangers move off in the same direction as the advancing men, parallel, maintaining distance.

In the meantime Richard Bonham has arrived in his small plane and is swooping low over the plain, pretending to chase the lions and thus lure the hunting party in the wrong direction.

Meanwhile, the hunters have skirted one side of a hill and the rangers are on the other, both moving in the same direction but are invisible to one another. A meeting is inevitable. I am with Sambu, a senior staff member of Big Life and excellent negotiator with an in-depth understanding of both sides of this story. Suddenly, the silence is burst by a loud wail, followed by the collective voice of forty men chanting and hollering. The few rangers that I am with take off at a run ahead of me. We can’t see anything, but the volume speaks of a serious confrontation. I stay below the ridge. Minutes crawl by. Slowly things seem to cool off. I risk joining the outskirts.

The scene is awfully real, this is what conservation is about here. Forty Maasai, adorned in everything from Manchester United jerseys to full traditional regalia, face-off with the green fatigues of thirteen Big Life rangers. Every man on both sides is from the area.

Sambu’s voice battles these proud men. I understand nothing but the body language needs no interpreting. He argues for the lives of the four remaining lions, and slowly I observe the tide begin to turn. As the ugly mess breaks up, faces emerge. I realise that this is not a group of testosterone-driven young men, but a diverse group spanning teens to elders. This hunt was not for pride or bragging rights, it was a response to a terrible loss. Some of the hunters have moved off to the side, and the vocal core begins to shrink. Slowly, men begin to walk away, some return to pull their friends with them. Finally, they are all turned. The landscape breathes out.

Here, as across Africa, lines are emerging in the fight to conserve ecosystems – people that place value on wildlife versus those that don’t. And increasingly this value is tied more to currency than culture. This is no longer a romantic story of an African people holding onto their traditional way of life and coexisting with predators. Livestock were traditionally valued in and of themselves. These days school fees and cell phone bills need to be paid, and the local definition of value is swimming out of focus.

No matter how much you might like having a lion roaring in the distance, or are prepared to coexist with it, there is only so much loss that you will tolerate before it becomes too much. And then you retaliate. I challenge anyone to look me in the eye and tell me that you would do different. It’s the age-old mantra – cost versus benefit. This is not some abstract western economic concept to be bandied about by greybeards, it is the universal trade-off that drives decision-making, conscious or otherwise, in every living human. The notion that local communities need to derive value from wildlife is not new but successful attainment of this goal appears to be elusive. Until each person sees the actual benefit of having wildlife around them, you cannot expect them to act other than in their own best interests, and if that means killing a lion then this should not come as a shock to our western conservationist sensitivities.

Epilogue – The shade of the umbrella thorn barely stretches wide enough to cover the ring of men. This is an important gathering; the topic of discussion is unprecedented. Two neighbouring group ranches had a stake in this lion killing, but they have emerged on opposing sides. The lions killed in a Merueshi group ranch boma and then crossed onto Mbirikani group ranch. The Merueshi hunting party followed them and killed the lioness on the other side of the border. Previously this would have been inconsequential, possibly congratulated, but certainly understood.

But now Mbirikani has a tourist lodge, a large number of people employed in the local game scouts, a compensation program to cover livestock losses to predators. None of which would have been possible without local conservation efforts.

As each man stands to talk, his stick traces unconscious lines in the sand. But the lines are firm – these are our lions, and if you ever follow them onto our land again, you will face arrest by our rangers, and prosecution by the wildlife authority of Kenya. The benefit to us is greater than the cost, and we will protect this benefit. The message is as clear as the blue sky above.

 

 

Tsavo Cheetah Project
Tsavo Cheetah Project

https://www.facebook.com/pages/
Tsavo-Cheetah-Project/175319669169721?ref=stream

 

 

Does she, as an individual cheetah, really matter?

Her future and her genetic integrity matters to Tsavo, Kenya, East Africa… and at a global level.

We are the only NGO working to save the cheetahs of Tsavo.

Please assist us where you can… Join and share our Campaign, today … (
http://igg.me/at/Tsavo/x/3186595
)

 

China Safari
Via – Notch the Lion-King of the Mara and His Five Sons


VOICE YOUR OPINION CHINA IS TRYING TO TAKE THE SEREGENTI MEANING EVEN NOTCH WONT BE ABLE TO SURVIVE,THE POOR RHINOS ELEPHANTS.I GUESS WE SHOULD KISS ALL BELOVED ANIMALS IN MARA SEREGENTI GOOD BYE


https://www.facebook.com/

/photo.php?fbid=554742804557487&set=a.125680667463705.14344.125601617471610&type=1&theater

 

CHINESE GETTING READY TO INVEST HEAVILY IN TANZANIA AND CHINESE TOURISM IS UP IN AFRICA

A Chinese millionaire with capital worth more than 700 million US dollars, Mr Zhou Yi has shown interest in building a luxurious accommodation facility in Serengeti National Park. Zhou declared his interest before a Tanzanian delegation that is on a visit to China. The delegation is looking for prospective investors in the tourism sector.

“I am now in the initial stages of applying for an investment site in the area. I expect to put up a modern accommodation facility to help increase the number of tourist beds,” he said.
~ Daily News

Tanzania’s tourism industry has always focused on low-impact nature travel rather than mass tourism.

The temptation will now be to look at maximizing tourism arrivals and revenue rather than staying with a long term strategy that will minimize environmental impact.
~Serengeti Watch.

OP ED
This is bad news on so many levels. The first is being seen right now in the Maasai Mara reserve in Kenya. 4000 beds in the Mara mean multitude of tourists with have a degradation effect on the environment, everything from noise and air pollution from the safari vehicles, to disturbance of the wildlife from illegal off road activities which (I have personally observed) are common among Chinese tourists who pressure their guides to break rules to allow them to get closer for photographs.

The other side of the coin is the Asian voracity for bush meat. “In China, for example, demand for wildlife meat, scales and exotic skins command cash prices in the order of US$150 to US$250 per kilogram, which, if compared to the average incomes of forest-dwelling households in Southeast Asia, allows for a better understanding of the monetary motivations behind this lucrative practice. Finally, the estimated global value of wildlife trade for consumption or recreational purposes is between 10 and 20 billions US dollars per year, according to local civil society groups.” ~ FAO Animal Production and health division.

While the tourists themselves may not indulge in dining on bush meat while on safari, there are many articles and anecdotal stories of Chinese contractors for road, port, or building/hotel construction being caught with large quantities of illegal bush meat, as well as ivory and rhino horn. One of our volunteers whose family owns property in Kenya told a story of catching Chinese who were building a near by road, on his families property – carrying in their hands and in bags on their shoulders were pythons, tortoises, pelicans, egrets, and flamingos.

READ MORE HERE:

SERENGETI WATCH:
TANZANIA SET TO WELCOME CHINESE TOURISTS, INVESTMENTS

http://www.savetheserengeti.org/uncategorized/chinese-touris/

DAILY NEWS:
SERENGETI WINS HEARTS OF CHINA

http://www.dailynews.co.tz/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=16418%3Aserengeti-wins-hearts-in-china&catid=97%3Alocal-news&Itemid=524

FAO (Food and Agriculture Organizations of the United Nations):
ANIMAL PRODUCTION AND HEALTH DIVISION

http://www.fao.org/ag/againfo/programmes/en/empres/news_151010.html

PHOTO: Cover of Book “CHINA SAFARI: On The Trail of Beijing’s Expansion in Africa

 

A most Beautiful Gallery of Photos of Two Cheetah Brothers of the Masai Mara…..by Harvey Wildlife Photography…..Wonderful Collection to View :)Greatcatsofthe”World”
Cheetah Brothers: Cheetahs: African Wildlife: Harvey Wildlife Photography
Cheetah brothers in Masia Mara, Kenya. Photograph by Harvey Wildlife Photography.

 


http://newswatch.nationalgeographic.com/2013/02/25/close-encounter-with-a-desert-roaming-cheetah/

When you are lucky enough to spot a cheetah (scientific name: Acinonyx jubatus raineyi; Kiswahili name: duma), you typically see a ‘little’ head (well……for a cat of that size ‘little’) sticking out of tall yellow grass under a shady acacia or balanites tree. If you are really lucky, there is a second ‘little’ head sticking out nearby. While conducting our desert warthog survey on the edge of Kenya’s remote Chalbi Desert we had a very different encounter with the majestic cheetah. While driving slowly along a sandy track, we suddenly saw, only 4 meters away, a lean adult cheetah standing between two thorny shrubs…staring at us.

Close Encounter with a Desert Roaming Cheetah
newswatch.nationalgeographic.com
The population size and geographical range of the cheetah have declined dramatically during the past 50 years .

 

Lion populations have fallen by 68% in just 50 years – from 100,000 to 35,000 today. What can be done to protect them?

Lions in Botswana under threat
Female African lion resting with her cub, Okavango Delta, Botswana. Photograph: Beverly Joubert/NGS/Getty Images


http://m.guardian.co.uk/environment/2013/feb/25/lions-africa-endangered-species-medicine-habitat

Monday 25 February 2013 11.31 GMT

Jeremy Hance

In 2002, I spent 10 days in Kenya. I’ll never forget lying in a tent on the Maasai Mara trying to sleep against the awful, blood-curdling roar of lions hunting on the moonlit plains. I would wake every hour, swearing a beast was at my door. Seven years later, a trip to Botswana ended without seeing (or hearing) a single lion, and while the safari was magnificent, something powerful and fearsome was notably absent. It made me wonder: what would Africa be without lions?

It’s not a rhetorical question. The king of the beasts is on his deathbed. The great cats are vanishing across Africa. In fact, a study last year in Biodiversity Conservation estimated that lion populations have fallen by 68% in just 50 years: from 100,000 in 1960 to 35,000 today. Another report by the NGO LionAid, however, estimated even fewer: 15,000.

While even 15,000 may sound like a lot when compared to other threatened species, lion populations are spread over more than 20 countries, spanning a geographic area larger than south America. Today they survive in small, fragmented pockets. Looking at a map of historic versus current lion ranges is like viewing a continent submerged by rising seas: only scattered islands remain. The situation is most dire in Western and Central Africa where LionAid warns as few as 645 lions survive.

The story of the lion’s decline is similar to that of many big predators. Ever-expanding human populations have gobbled up lion habitat for agriculture, livestock, and cities, while numbers lion prey – from antelope to zebra – have fallen dramatically. And like many top predators, lions face an unceasing conflict with humans: they are killed as pests, for trophies, and even for sham medicine. In order to conserve the lion, we must first stop so many dying at human hands.

Lion-human conflict is as old as our origins on the African savannah. Lions do not shy away from killing livestock when they can, and they attack people with some regularity. Both trends may be worsened by prey decline. For millennia, pastoralists have fought back and speared the lions.

But now some have turned to poisoning lions en-masse. In East Africa, a dangerous pesticide known as Furadan (banned in the EU, Canada, and US) is sprinkled over lion-killed livestock. When the pride returns to feed, they perish agonizingly. Unlike spears, the neurotoxin kills scavengers too. It’s so deadly that in 2009 a 3-year-old boy died after ingesting Furadan, possibly mistaking the candy-blue pesticide for a treat

Another threat: taxidermy and trophy hunters who argue that by shelling out a lot of cash to shoot animals, they aid conservation efforts. This may be a legitimate argument for some species, but not for lions. Big-cat experts Dereck and Beverly Joubert with National Geographic told me that lion hunting often ends in a long trail of murder , as dramatic as any royal coup.

Hunters almost always target mature males—because of their manes—but by doing so, they unwittingly trigger a wholesale massacre. When a top male dies, a pride becomes vulnerable to challengers. If new males take over their first act is to kill any resisting females and all cubs. The Jouberts say that shooting one male can result in the deaths of over 24 lions.

Finally, there’s a new concern: the lion bone trade. Tigers have been killed for traditional Chinese medicine for millennia, some of whose practitioners consider their bones an aphrodisiac. But with wild tigers dwindling and demand rising, traders are turning to lions. Many of the lions involved are raised, much like tiger-farming, solely to be killed for their bones. In this case, trophy-hunters get to shoot a lion and the parts are shipped to China to make someone feel potent, even though there’s no medical evidence this works. But if the trade widens, conservationists fear that eventually wild lions will also face the gun.

Conservation must start with halting targeted killings. Lion hunting should be banned or at least better regulated. Working with local communities to mitigate lion conflict, compensate for livestock killed, and better protect both livestock and people should be a priority. Finally, the lion bone trade must be stopped before it gets out of control, like rhino horn and ivory.

This is not to say the lion is going extinct anytime soon. But I wouldn’t be surprised if in a couple decades our king fell victim to the same fate as the tiger today: down to just a few thousand in protected areas, struggling even there to survive against the rising tide of humanity. We still have time to decide for lions: would we be satisfied with a token population, representing what once was, or do we want African ecosystems that are still ruled by kings? Where antelope bound in fear and zebra watch the horizon, where prides tussle with hyenas under a dark sky, and the king lounges in the morning light, belly full?

I say, long live the king.

 

With the wildebeests gone, the lions and other big cats in the Mara, are actively hunting any available game. We were able to see during our stay a few lion hunting warthogs. The Ridge pride with the help of Notch and his gang, brought down two hippos on different dates. Most of the prides too have very small cubs, which are still very playful and photogenic! We could spent hours or even a whole day watching them.

Cheetah sightings were also great. We saw 7 one day!, and all within one hour of our afternoon game drive. This is a recent records considering how rare they have been lately. Malaika and her son(whom we have named Lucky Boy) has been south of the Talek on the lower Burrungat plains, but have now crossed the river north to Rhino ridge. She is now even more than ever, jumping on the roofs of vehicles since the grass is now very tall. The mother of 3, who has for a long time been down at Lookout hill, has also moved into the same area as Malaika. We did see her hunt, though unsuccessfully a couple of times. There is also one female whom we thought is lactating. We saw her between Rekero camp and Rhino ridge. We hope if she has cubs that she will be able to bring them up successfully.

Our leopard sightings was great too. We saw only 3 different leopards on this trip. These were Olive, her daughter Saba and a young male at the pump house. Who gave us the most beautiful poses. We followed Olive yesterday into the bushes near Mara Explorer where i believe she is hiding her cubs.
Despite the tall grass, we were also able to see a few Serval cats, hunting in the grass, where we got great leaping shots. A couple of them were not shy of vehicles at all.


http://paul-kirui.blogspot.ca/2013/02/big-cat-week-in-mara.html

Masai Mara Wildlife Updates: Big Cat Week in the Mara
paul-kirui.blogspot.com

 


http://kenyawildlifetrust.org/kwt-launch-cheetah-project/

The Cheetah Project will be led by Ms Femke Broekhuis of Oxford University’s Wildlife FemkeResearch Unit (WildCRU) and will seek to determine the current status of cheetahs in the Greater Mara ecosystem and to identify the major threats that could be causing declines in the current cheetah population. The data will initially be collected during a two-year period using an array of data collection techniques including behavioral observation, faecal analysis, historic data and interviews.

KWT launch Cheetah Project | Kenya Wildlife Trust
kenyawildlifetrust.org
The Kenya Wildlife Trust continues to make strides in Carnivore Conservation and Research in Kenya. Within the next couple of months we will be launching the Mara Ecosystem Cheetah Project, a venture which will have important implications for cheetah conservation both in Kenya and for the rest of Af…

 

 

Published on Feb 22, 2013

Talk at the Global Issues Services Summit held on 22/02/13 at the International School of Kenya.

 
Via – Cee4life

Raabia Hawa – (Kenyans for Wildlife) KENYA – I am very used to seeing the atrocities committed on animals around the world. Rarely do speeches from people move me to the point of tears. My dear Raabia reached into her brave heart and spoke at the recent Global Issues Services Summit held at the International School of Kenya, of her harrowing experiences, and grief at loosing the wildlife of Kenya, and urgent need for protection of the last of the wild animals of Kenya. If you are looking for honesty within conservation, then look at this, listen to this. This a woman of integrity and a force and voice of the future of conservation in Kenya. God bless you always Raabia. ~ Sybelle

 

Lion Aid

https://www.facebook.com/Lionaid

Back in 2004, Kenya suggested that African lions be placed on Appendix I of CITES . Kenya then was actively encouraged to withdraw that proposal at the CITES Conference of Parties 15, and to instead accept that a number of meetings would later take place inviting lion range states to report their lion numbers and examine management practices for the species. So the application was withdrawn and such meetings were duly organized in 2005/2006. No substantive and effective action for lion conservation resulted from those meetings.

Then, in July 2011, at the CITES Animals Committee meeting, Kenya and Namibia were appointed co-Chairs of a Periodic Review of lions. The purpose of this Review which was recommended as “high priority” was to ask all lion range States to report on their remaining lion populations and report back BEFORE the 16th CITES Conference of Parties in March 2013.

Now, in late February 2013, it seems that this Review has NOT been completed as requested. It would appear that there has been a great reluctance on the part of the lion range States to participate in an accurate assessment of their remaining lion populations and the process has effectively stalled.

Make no mistake here, such a Review could well have resulted in a proposal to uplist the African lion to Appendix 1 at CoP16 if it was felt that remaining lion populations had declined to levels risking the sustainability of trade in the species……….

We realise that Kenya will be very occupied with elephant and rhino proposals at the conference but we would urge Kenya to also pay dedicated attention to other species requiring urgent conservation consideration.

Click below to read the full blog.


http://www.lionaid.org/blog/2013/02/whatever-happened-to-the-periodic-review-of-lions.htm

Pieter’s Blog – LionAid
LionAid – Leading Charity to Protect and Conserve Endangered Lions Worldwide

 


http://www.avaaz.org/en/petition/Kenya_Support_for_Higher_poaching_penalties/?fRyKZcb&pv=10

*** WE must stand up to the Poaching that is killing all the Endangered Species of this Planet! WE are better then the vile humans that are doing the slaughtering…
5,086 have Signed so far. Is your name on that List??? If not please please add and then Share it…………..

Kenya: Support for Higher poaching penalties.
We are rapidly losing major keystone species such as elephant and rhino to a trade facilitated by criminalized syndicates. Unfortunately the levels of international unrest and wider economic crisis have eclipsed the need for greater awareness and decisive action across the international stage.
Lion Aid

https://www.facebook.com/Lionaid

 

This just broke my heart today.

A little girl in Kenya watched a TV commercial of a bread company in Kenya where a man and a lion fight over a loaf. The man wins. She was so saddened by this that she encouraged all classmates in her school to raise money to provide loaves of bread to feed the lions in Nakuru National Park near her home.

She is 5 years old. Her name is Solidad Mihadi and she is at St. Xavier’s Nursery School in Nakuru, Kenya.

Such innocence and love for wildlife is just precious beyond belief. We are all involved with complicated issues like trophy hunting, CITES, human/lion conflict … and here is this little person who is promoting her own solution to save lions.

Bless her. She represents Kenya’s future. You can write to Solidad via jsphodhiambo@gmail.com (or) Solidad Mihadi c/o Joseph Odhiambo, P.O BOX 244, Nakuru, Kenya. Please take the time to send her a personal message. Thank you.

 

cee4life

https://www.facebook.com/cee4life.org?ref=stream

 

CITES – I need help. I have been accepted as a CITES delegate at the CoP 16 CITES meeting, in Bangkok, 3 -14 March. Due to protocols with CITES there are alot of fee’s and I just do not have the funding to get there. If you can help me in any way, please go to www.wildlifecalling.org.uk for any donation, no matter how big or small, please mark any donation as, CITES Cee4life, or contact me directly via email, sybelle@cee4life.org I only have until the 26th Feb to raise the funds. Thank you for anything that you can do. ~ Sybelle

 

Posted by on February 8th, 2013 at 11: 10 am

cheetah

Next month CITES members will get to vote on action to help combat the cheetah smuggling trade.

Next month CITES members will get the chance to discuss and vote on employing specialist consultants to examine the illegal trade in cheetahs. A proposal has been put to the convention by Kenya, Ethiopia and Uganda that a study be undertaken to discover the impacts of the illegal cheetah trade.

There are currently an estimated known 7,500 cheetah left in the wild with an estimated additional 2,500 living in areas that are poorly surveyed for this big cat. Two of the five sub-species are critically endangered and the remainder are classed as vulnerable on the IUCN Red List.

The trade in cheetahs is predominately driven by the Middle East countries where the cheetah is a status symbol in private zoos or used as a hunting animal in much the same way that some hunts uses dogs.

The cheetah is a CITES Appendix 1 species so it has the highest levels of protection. There is some trade permitted in the cheetah with three African countries having the right to export an annual quote:

  • Namibia – 150 individuals,
  • Zimbabwe – 50 individuals,
  • Botswana – 5 individuals.

While being able to export live cats under the CITES quotas there have been very few live exports since the 1990′s. Most of the exports through the quota have been as hunting trophies or skins. This opens the opportunity for wildlife criminals to provide for the live cheetah trade.

Monitoring of seizures by various organisations show that cheetah cubs in particular are often traded. In 2011 one organisation – Coalition of Wildlife Trafficking – indicated that 70 cheetahs had been intercepted from wildlife traffickers. Many cubs will die during the process of transport and even when intercepted and rescued the cubs have a high likelihood of death.

While little is known about the trade in cheetahs it is thought the the Horn of Africa and Somalia are the major routes used by wildlife smugglers to get the big cats out of southern and eastern Africa which are now the stronghold of the species.

The trade in cheetahs for pets, private zoos and hunting animals is believed to be putting increasing pressure on the wild populations. It is difficult to breed cheetahs in captivity and a study in 2001 showed that the captive population was not self-sustaining with 30% of captive animals having been caught in the wild.

To try and get a better understanding of the impacts of the illegal cheetah trade the three African countries have asked that CITES consider the following proposals:

Directed to the Standing Committee

16.xx The Standing Committee shall commission an independent study, in accordance with UN rules, of both the legal and illegal trade in wild cheetahs, and assess the impact of this trade on the species’ conservation in the wild. The study will research the source of cheetah in illegal trade, transit routes of trafficked cheetahs, and will document the measures taken by Parties with regard to live confiscated specimens. All range States will be fully consulted as stakeholders, and the findings will be reported to the 65th meeting of the CITES Standing Committee.

Directed to the Parties

16.xx All relevant Parties are urged to assist those commissioned to undertake the above-mentioned study in any way possible including through the provision of necessary information about illegal and legal trade in cheetah.
16.xx Parties are further urged to provide reports concerning all detected illegal trade in cheetah specimens to the 65th meeting of the Standing Committee and relevant Law Enforcement Agencies including Interpol Wildlife Crime Unit.

The number of cheetahs estimated to be in the wild in eastern Africa (Ethiopia, southern Sudan, Uganda, Kenya and Tanzania) is estimated at 2,572 while the stronghold of southern Africa containing about 4,500 adults.  This is broken down as:

  • Angola – present but unknown;
  • Botswana – 1,800;
  • Malawi – <25 (and probably extirpated: Purchase and Purchase 2007);
  • Mozambique: <50;
  • Namibia – 2,000;
  • South Africa – 550;
  • Zambia – 100;
  • Zimbabwe – 400.

By getting a better understanding of the illegal trade and the routes that wildlife smugglers use it is hoped that better conservation management plans for the enigmatic big cat can be developed.

 

FB Events

 

Our precious ELEPHANT, RHINO, LION and others are all in grave danger – killed mercilessly by hunters and poachers daily. Please help these beautiful beasts by joining this online signing event
https://www.facebook.com/events/456460841068824/
and promoting these critical petitions – your voice WILL MAKE ALL THE DIFFERENCE. Thank you ♥

 

 Panthera

http://www.facebook.com/pantheracats

 

Check out this great MongaBay interview w/ Panthera‘s VP, Andrea Heydlauff, where she discusses the making of “My Pantanal,” a short film about a boy who lives on a conservation ranch in the Brazilian Pantanal @
http://bit.ly/11EmJ7h
Learn more about upcoming My Pantanal screenings & Andrea’s plans for Panthera’s next film about the Lion Guardians – Maasai warriors who now are working to protect lions in Kenya.

 


http://mobiletoi.timesofindia.com/mobile.aspx?article=yes&pageid=7&sectid=edid%3D&edlabel=TOIA&mydateHid=12-01-2013&pubname=Times+of+India+-+Ahmedabad&edname&articleid=Ar00701&publabel=TOI

Himanshu Kaushik | TNN

Ahmedabad:Winter has set in and the king of the Billiwadi Kundi area thought it an opportune time for a jaunt to woo nubile females or check out new territories to annex.In his absence,a coup was sprung as a young invader usurped the territory and began eyeing his mates.
This left forest officials worried as takeovers result in the
massacre of new-born
cubs.The department kept a close watch to save precious cubs from infanticide.An official in the forest department said,Whenever such takeovers take place,the new lion definitely attacks the young ones if they hinder him from mating with a lioness.The newborns do not leave their mother in the initial months and are at great risk of infanticide.
This trait is common throughout Gir,amid the angry roars of lions thrown out of their territory unceremoniously.At Billiwadi Kundi,this played out.
The lion who rules the territory in the eco-tourism zone of Gir had gone out.The area was invaded by a nomad who grabbed a female in the area.The female had three cubs which were less than a month old and hence we kept a constant watch on the takeover.This forced coupling was a danger for cubs,as they suddenly became unprotected, said Deputy Conservator of Forests,Sandeep Kumar.
He said that during the initial fight between the nomad and the mother,the cubs took shelter at a safe distance.Forest officials and ground staff kept close watch on these cubs.He further said that lions normally mate for 4-5 days straight,and the lioness didnt even attempts to locate her cubs during this.Finally,after the nomad left smelling a return and attack by the king of the area the female returned to her cubs after a three-day search.
Due to effective monitoring and observation these three little lion cubs could be saved, said Kumar.
He further said that the beat guards and the forest officials are now constantly keeping an eye on such territory invasions which are a routine affair in the first three months of the year.

 

10 January 2013 Last updated at 08:16 ET


http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-africa-20969868

 

A lion, file pic There are thought to be no more than about 4,500 lions in Zambia

Zambia has banned the hunting of lions and leopards because of the rapid decline in its numbers of big cats.

Zambia’s tourism minister said there was more value in game-viewing tourism than blood sport, which brought in just $3m (£1.9m) last year.

Sylvia Masebo said the country did not have enough cats for hunting purposes.

“Tourists come to Zambia to see the lion and if we lose the lion we will be killing our tourism industry,” she told Reuters.

But Chuma Simukonda from the Zambia Wildlife Authority (ZAWA) said the ban would be bad for tourism.

“The population of cats in Zambia is around 3,400 to 3,500 and with the ban on safari hunting for cats, we are likely to lose on revenue,” he told the AFP news agency.

He said about 55 cats were killed by hunters each year.

Neighbouring Botswana is banning all sport hunting from 2014, while Kenya halted hunting for sport decades ago.

 

Tsavo lioness
 STOP THE SERENGETI HIGHWAY

http://www.facebook.com/pages/STOP-THE-SERENGETI-HIGHWAY/125601617471610

 

A lioness was on Sunday night killed by a speeding vehicle on the busy Nairobi-Mombasa highway [in Kenya]. Witnesses said the lioness, which died on the spot, had her teeth, eyeballs, claws and tail were taken away by unknown people.

Parts of her skin were also removed. Several wild animals have been run-over on the highway by wreckless driviers, especially on the stretch between the Mtito Andei – Bachuma Gate, which goes through the Tsavo National Park.

Two days ago, a buffalo was killed in the same area. These incidents have prompted wildlife coservationists to ask that speed bumps be laid down in key spots on the highway.

“We have put up notices on the highway warning drivers of the presence of wildlife but many of them do not obey the road signs.Many people have died in the area after hitting big wild animals like the elephants,” said Wilson Korir, the KWS assistant director in charge of the Tsavo conservation area.

Korir said elephants, buffaloes, hyenas and zebras are the most killed by speeding vehicles in the highway. “We suspect the lioness was killed by a bus. Its very rare to find lions being hit by vehicles in the area,” he said. The assistant director warned those who made away with parts of the lioness that they will be arrested and punished.

“Its illegal for one to possess game trophies. Anyone found with the stolen parts will face the law,” Korir said. The carcass was taken to Tsavo East by KWS rangers. It was recently reported that poachers had began harvesting wildlife body parts for witchcraft.

Story above from the THE STAR December 18, 2012

http://the-star.co.ke/news/article-99883/bus-runs-over-tsavo-lioness

 

 Animal Liberation Worldwide

http://www.facebook.com/ultracobra9

 

 

The sick trade of exotic species continues on United Arab Emirates. There are more cheetahs in private zoos in Dubai and other cities than on the Kenya wilderness.

We need the help of Anonymous or any hacker to shut down the website were hundreds of kittens are being offered. Please contact: animalsfightback@yahoo.com

 

Our precious African ELEPHANT, RHINO, LION AND CHEETAH are all in grave danger, being killed mercilessly by hunters and criminals daily. Please help these beautiful beasts by signing and promoting these (SIX) 6 critical petitions – your voice WILL MAKE ALL THE DIFFERENCE:
https://www.facebook.com/events/456460841068824/

 

The lion population is dying out 

The lion population is dying out

Saturday December 8,2012

By Julie Carpenter

THERE’S a reason why the lion is considered one of Africa’s most iconic animals.

Watching one recently during a South African safari it was impossible to hold back a sharp intake of breath as this great beast swaggered across our path, tail slowly swishing, his huge mane unruffled by the early morning wind.

There was something spine-tingling about being able to view this majestic male, coolly unperturbed by our presence, wending his way through the undergrowth to proudly take up a prime position on an open plain to survey his kingdom.

Even the way he walked seemed to indicate power, strength and authority.

So it might come as a surprise to learn that lions now need our help – badly. A study released this week has revealed that lion populations have dropped by a staggering two-thirds over the past half century.

ì
They live in big, prominent prides and reach good numbers when they’re living in protected areas
î

Dr Luke Hunter, president of Panthera,

There may now be as few as 30,000 left worldwide and this, the report suggests, is largely because their natural habitat especially in West Africa has shrunk dramatically as booming human populations have taken it over.

According to scientists at Duke University in the US about three-quarters of Africa’s savannah grasslands – the lion’s historic home – has disappeared over the past 50 years, broken up into farms or engulfed in development.

“Lion populations in West and Central Africa are acutely threatened,” says the study.

“Only immediate, energetic conservation measures can offer any hope for their survival.”
It is no exaggeration to say that lion populations are dying out across the continent.

Since 2002 lions have become extinct in five countries. They currently exist in 28 African countries and one Asian country (India) but it’s believed that only seven of them have at least 1,000 lions left – Botswana, Ethiopia, Kenya, South Africa, Tanzania, Zambia and Zimbabwe.

“I hope this paper will be a real eye opener,” says Dr Luke Hunter, president of Panthera, a leading wild cat conservation organisation that contributed to the report.

“For a long time now lions have been off the conservation radar. Part of the reason is that they’re very visible, whether you see them on Animal Planet or National Geographic or in the game parks of Southern and East Africa.

“They live in big, prominent prides and reach good numbers when they’re living in protected areas. As a result they can suffer from this misconception that they don’t warrant protection but they do. In recent years their decline has been accelerating to catastrophic levels.”

Just under a century ago it was thought that there were as many as 200,000 lions living in the wild in Africa. The drop to the current figure of 30,000 is marked. If you go back further the difference is even more dramatic.

“Around 200 years ago before European colonisation lions existed almost everywhere in Africa except for the Sahara, the Congo and the rainforest basin,” says Hunter.

“There literally would have been millions.

“The issue now is that Africa has the fastest growing population of any continent and a very significant majority live in African savannah habitat. As human populations and their livestock increase that puts enormous pressure
on lions because they are competing for the same resources.”

As their habitat is converted for human use lions are coming into increasingly closer contact with man which can fuel intense “conflict situations” where lions are speared, shot or even poisoned by herders and farmers who perceive them as a threat to their livelihood.

In Kenya, for instance, around 100 of the country’s 2,000 lions are being killed every year. If the trend continues this means there will be no more wild lions in Kenya by 2030.

Lions can of course be difficult to live with,” says Hunter.

“They will kill livestock in certain circumstances.”

Those circumstances increase if the lion’s own prey such as the different species of antelope is overhunted by
humans, which again happens as a result of human population increases.

What to do about the issue is the key question.

“Broadly there are two answers,” says Hunter.

“The core of any conservation strategy is having good game reserves and national parks. Africa still does have enormous areas of wilderness.

The Kruger National Park in South Africa, for example, is the size of Israel and a huge amount of Tanzania is still
wild with spectacularly large protected areas.”

The second perhaps more complicated answer is trying to improve the ways that man and lions can coexist.

“This is key,” says Hunter.

“Just because people and their livestock live in traditional lion habitat doesn’t mean the lion populations there have to completely disappear. In some cases they will but in others it can be prevented. People in pastoral areas of Africa
have lived with lions for centuries and they worked out ways to coexist and I don’t mean that in some harmonious hand-in-hand in the sunset way. It was never that.

Humans and lions have always killed one another in very low instances but neither species wants to get to that point. Traditional herding societies in Africa did a pretty good job of mostly avoiding it.”

ONE project instigated by Panthera is the Lion Guardians Programme which focuses on traditional pastoral
communities. “Take the Masai tribe whose entire culture and economy is based on cattle and who are also famous for hunting lions.

Traditional hunts were never really a problem because they were very infrequent but because human-lion conflict has increased so has the killing of lions.

It’s no longer to do with tradition – they just don’t want lions around because they kill cattle. The Lion Guardian programme works by changing the lion hunters into Lion Guardians.

“We employ the Lion Guardians essentially to resurrect what they’ve always done which is to be good protectors of their livestock and avoid the reasons that you have problems with lions in the first place. If lions can’t get to
cattle there are fewer confl icts. It’s essentially about good husbandry.”

Other issues also affecting lion numbers include the poaching of bush meat (which reduces lion’s prey) and trophy hunting.

“The other is the killing of lions for use in the Asian traditional medicine trade,” says Hunter.

“This has been an issue for rhinos and tigers for a long time but just about every part of the lion has so-called use in this context, which has absolutely no scientific basis whatsoever. It’s an increasing threat.”

As to what might happen to lion numbers if no conservation action is taken, Hunter says: “It means we’ll be looking at the lion in a couple of decades in the same way we’re forced to look at the tiger now. There will be increasingly smaller and isolated populations.

“The more that trend continues the more likely it is those populations will become extinct. That’s what we want to avoid.”

 

Join Cee4life on FaceBook.
“Become a Part of the Solution”

Cee4life

http://www.facebook.com/cee4life.org?ref=stream

Behind the Cloak of Buddha – Cee4life

http://www.facebook.com/BehindtheCloakBuddha?ref=stream

Benue Zoo Animals Appeal – Cee4life

http://www.facebook.com/BenueZooAnimalsAppeal?ref=stream

Together for Tumbo – Cee4life

http://www.facebook.com/groups/savetumbo/

Marine Survival – Australian Dugongs & Turtles

http://www.facebook.com/MarineSurvivalAustralianDugongsTurtles?ref=stream

“Animals do have a voice. If you ignore their suffering, I will remind you of it. If you don’t understand them, I will translate. If you don’t hear them, I will be their voice. You may silence them but you cannot silence me as long as I live.” ~ Anita Mahdessian

 

As 2012 comes to an end, Cee4life would like to remember some extraordinary animals. We humans are always so quick to pat ourselves on the back and say “good job”. But out there in the world are creatures that paved the way for future animals, who’s very being and story changed things forever.

This year we met 4 beautiful cheetah cubs, the Mara Cheetah Cubs, and Tumbo the disabled cheetah cub

. We fought hard for the Mara cubs freedom and release in to the wild, we lost. They became captives. We fought for Tumbo to live an ethical life cared for by the family who loved him and raised him, we lost and Tumbo became a captive.

These cubs went into the Nairobi Animal Orphanage and film of vulgar handling, (abuse) of the wild Mara cubs was released, and then the little girl died…. xo. Tumbo the once free roaming cheetah cub was locked inside a tiny enclosure, nothing of how he had lived.

WE cried out, together we cried out.

But somewhere along the path, something happened. With all the media, all the outcry, a change was made. Now, inside the Nairobi Orphanage the surviving cubs are being cared for a little more ethically.

We here at Cee4life, want to thank these extraordinary innocent cheetahs, for paving the way to more ethical care. We want to thank them for enduring the unendurable, for existing so humans would be forced to make a better environment for future animals. We want to send them all of our love, and We promise, that we will always watch over them, and we will Never Give Up xoxo Sybelle, Donna, Dawn, Ledonna, Scott, and all at Cee4life

Iranian cheetahs are virtually invisible in the wild, living in the most remote desert areas. Intensely shy, scattered like grains of sand over Iran’s vast central plateau, and hovering on the edge of extinction, they are essentially impossible to see. Therefore, without “camera traps“, we are not able to detect the cheetahs within millions of hectares of wilderness.

 

One day, the hare set fire to the bush. Unfortunately, the fire reached the lions’ children. The lionpromised to give a buffalo to the one who had set the fire to the bush. The hare wen

t to inform the hyenaabout this.“My dear hyena, the lion wants to see to the one who burned the bush today, so that he can offer him a buffalo!” The hyena went to find the lion: “My dear lion, it appears you are looking for the one who set the bush on fire?”The lion said yes. The hyena said that she was the one. The lion replied: “Oh really? So it was you who set fire to the bush?” The hyena continued to say yes. So, the lion set off and asked her to follow him.

A little farther on the lion asked again: “Who burned this place, here?” “I’m the one who burned all of that” the hyena replied. The lion continued his walk with the hyena.

A little farther on, the lion asked his question again: “Who burned this place here?” “Didn’t I already tell you that I am the one who burned the whole area?” said the hyena with some annoyance. They kept walking. When they came to a small tree called a bagênd, the lion asked her once more: “Who burned this area?” “I already told you that I am the one who burned all that you see” said the hyena.

The lion walked around the small tree behind which were his dead cubs. He asked the hyena: “Who burned this area?” “No it wasn’t me. The fires got mixed up. I’m not the one who set the fire here” said the hyena. The lion seized her and cut off her paws. Even today, when the lion finds the hyena he cuts off her paws; he doesn’t kill her.

Don’t mess with dad! Find out more about lions in Burkino Faso at
http://lionalert.org/alert/country/detail/code/BF

Posted by Luke Hunter of Panthera on October 25, 2012
newswatch.nationalgeographic.com
03-koshki-rescued-asiatic-cheetah-670

This week, National Geographic magazine published extraordinary new images of wild Asiatic cheetahs in Iran. Shown cresting a barren, mountainous ridge devoid of green, Iran’s cheetahs could not be any more distant–geographically and ecologically–from their African counterparts pictured in the same article navigating tourist traffic-jams on Kenyan grasslands. And unlike Kenya’s spectacularly photogenic cheetahs, Iranian cats are virtually invisible. Intensely shy, scattered like grains of sand over Iran’s vast central plateau, and hovering on the edge of extinction, they are essentially impossible to see.

That National Geographic was able to photograph these rarest of cheetahs is testament to 11 years of conservation work by the Iranian Department of Environment. In 2001, with support from the United Nations Development Programme, the DoE initiated a comprehensive long-term program to pull the cheetah back from the extinction cliff. The ambitious “Conservation of the Asiatic Cheetah Project” (CACP) designated five landscapes as specially protected cheetah reserves and provided the resources to make them safe havens–dozens of dedicated cheetah guards, new vehicles, motorbikes and other materiel. Alongside the necessity of vigorous protection, the CACP mounted a nationwide campaign to draw attention to the cheetah’s plight. Back then, most Iranians had no idea they were the custodians of the last Asiatic cheetahs on earth. By the time of my first visit to Iran in 2004, that had already changed. When buying supplies in a roadside store in a tiny, remote desert town, I saw a CACP poster pinned behind the counter showing Marita, then the only Asiatic cheetah in captivity (Marita died in 2003: Koshki, shown on page 115 of the magazine, is one of two captive Asiatic cheetahs in the world today). The ancient shopkeeper proudly told me his village was in the heart of yuz palang country and that only Iran has the cheetahs; he was correct on both counts.

The surveys corroborate what Iranian biologists have long suspected: There are fewer than 100 Asiatic cheetahs left on Earth.

The CACP also initiated the first scientific surveys of cheetahs. Assisted by the Wildlife Conservation Society and later my organization Panthera (both groups still cooperate with the Department of Environment in conserving the cheetah), the CACP began camera-trapping. Camera-traps–remote triggered cameras that silently capture images of anything passing by–were unknown in Iran prior to the CACP. Today, the project has completed 24 massive surveys logging almost 34,000 camera-trap nights (10 individual camera-traps running for one night equals 10 trap-nights). From the original five core areas known to harbor cheetahs, they have been confirmed from a further 10 sites in the country. Evidence of residency and breeding including terrific pictures of young cubs, is now confirmed from 10 of the 15. Incredibly, even though this herculean effort has produced tens of thousands of images of wildlife, cheetahs have been photographed on fewer than 400 occasions in more than a decade. The surveys corroborate what Iranian biologists have long suspected–there are fewer than 100 Asiatic cheetahs left on Earth.

Formidable Challenge

It was these incredibly long odds that faced Geographic photographer Frans Lanting when he hit the ground in April 2011. I accompanied Frans on this first expedition to help find promising sites for his high-end version of the camera-trap–digital SLRs linked to multiple flashes and inch-wide sensor beams positioned with blow-torch precision to trigger the shot. Everything hinged on being able to anticipate where the cheetahs would move. It was a formidable challenge given the arid enormity of their desert habitat where identifying cheetah-friendly locations felt like looking for pennies on a sandy beach. Not only that, Iranian cheetahs live at the lowest density recorded anywhere for the species, one to two cats per 1,000 square kilometers; the same-size area on East African plains can hold 100 cheetahs.  So, even if we found a site with promise–a freshwater spring, scent-marking tree or natural trail–it might be months before a cheetah happened along.

Fortunately for us, the expedition had more expertise than my semi-educated guesses. From their years of surveying, the CACP scientists as well as biologists from the Persian Wildlife Heritage Foundation and the Iranian Cheetah Society had built up a very detailed picture of how cheetahs move through the forbidding landscape. Iranian field knowledge was the reason the mission had any chance at all. Guided by their know-how, our desert trip became a whirlwind “greatest hits” tour of good cheetah sites, the best of which Frans was able to select for his cameras. Combining exquisite Iranian field knowledge with Frans’ technical wizardry and perfect composition, the resulting images are a spectacular first.

Iranian field knowledge was the reason the mission had any chance at all.

My hope is that National Geographic’s wonderful photographs bring the predicament of this critically endangered cat to a new audience who, like most Iranians a decade ago, had never heard of the cheetah’s existence in the country. I also hope the photos celebrate the dedication of the Iranian Department of Environment, the CACP staff and Iran’s energetic NGO community to conserving the cheetahs. Here in the West, we are rarely given such a positive glimpse into Iran without the over-heated rhetoric of politics. As the only country on Earth that has managed to keep this remarkable cat alive, Iran deserves to be congratulated.

Photograph by Frans Lanting:

Rescued as a cub from the hands of a poacher, five-year-old Koshki grew up in a reserve in northeast Iran. He’s one of only two Asiatic cheetahs living in captivity. A thick tuft of fur on his shoulders, needed for bitter winters on the high steppes of central Iran, sets him apart from African cheetahs.

See more of Lanting’s photography in the November 2012 issue of National Geographic Magazine.

Visit Frans Lanting’s website.

 

Lion Death – Shocking photographs coming out of Kenya with the deliberate
murder of a Lion. The Lion was in Astra ranch machakos area, and killed one sheep that was being illegally grazed. There was a wedding in a nearby boma and an alarm was raised, and 3 cars ran down the lion before it was speared. 3 arrests were made but they were released around midnight last night. Kenyan Wildlife Service are attending meetings with the community now. RIP Lion xoxoxo Innocent Lion…..

PHOTO Just in: AsM3 of the Athi pride. R.I.P boy :’(
Photo: PHOTO Just in: AsM3 of the Athi pride. R.I.P boy :'(

 

 

- Tumbo was found alone and crying, 5km from Lemartis camp, Kenya by a group of children herding goats. They brought him to Lemartis to seek help for him, Lemartis obliged. KWS was informed immediately of Tumbo’s presence. It was March 2012. Lemartis took Tumbo to a Nairobi Vet where Tumbo had his hips and pelvis radiographed and was diagnosed with severe calcium deficiency. He was immediately started on dietary supplement Calphos (calcium) and a specialised exercise and diet regime was in place.

Additionally, he was vaccinated against Rabies, Cat Flu, and Feline Enteritis. Tumbo was allocated a 24/7 carer at Lemartis who implemented the Veterinary exercise regime of walking distances each day and swimming. On these walks, Tumbo would be walked past various tourist venues. As Tumbo grew a little older, Lemartis became aware that Tumbo’s front legs were worsening and took him back to the Veterinarian. Tumbo was then diagnosed with “Bilateral Valgus deformaties of both carpi, probably due to Short Ulna Syndrome”. On the 23rd August 2012, Tumbo’s Veterinarian advised and recommended URGENT SURGICAL INTERVENTION.

A photograph surfaced of Tumbo with a group of visitors which caused some to suspect exploitation. This photograph was taken when Tumbo was on his daily exercise and the carer was asked if Tumbo could be in a photograph with them. It certainly wasnt a daily occurrence. Lemartis gave KWS a courtesy call to reassure them that Tumbo was not being used as a tourist attraction. KWS in return told Lemartis that they were coming to confiscate Tumbo.

Lemartis provided KWS with all Veterinary information and went into negotiations, desperately trying to save Tumbo from the Nairobi Orphanage. The Veterinarian wrote a letter which included the vital need for urgent medical care in addition to providing Tumbo with a humane facility at Lake Navisha for Tumbo to recover from his operation and live a humane existence.

Tumbo was confiscated and taken firstly to the Nairobi Vet section of Nairobi Orphanage.

Lemartis went into negotiations. Then something strange happened, Cee4life was informed that a KWS employee alleged that if Lemartis paid $3000 for Tumbo, it may ensure he goes to the ethical and humane Lake Navisha. The money was paid and days went by, and after repeated phone calls and email correspondence from Lemartis and no correspondence returned, it was verbally told to Lemartis over the phone that Tumbo was now a captive inside Nairobi Orphanage.

His operation has not been done and cannot be done inside of the orphanage, due to the after care required. He is heard to be crying consistently.

There is no answer or justification of why Tumbo is not allowed to be treated humanely and with the prescribed Veterinary care for his condition. This is a high priority animal welfare issue.

This tragic situation begs the questions –
Will the professional Veterinary diagnosis and recommended program for health and humane care for Tumbo?
Will Tumbo be released for his prescribed URGENT SURGICAL INTERVENTION and the prescribed after care at Lake Naivisha?
What has the $3000 given Tumbo because for every animal confiscated off people, there is NO requirement to pay a fee.
Was the $3000 payment legal?
Was Lemartis coerced for money?

Cee4life will do our best to get the professional medical care implemented for Tumbo and try to get him to a humane facility. We will strive to find a way to work with, assist, support and help Kenyan Wildlife Service and Nairobi Orphanage for the animals. But it may be difficult.

Please help spread Tumbo’s plight around the world and support.

It may not mean much to some, but for this little disabled cheetah, it means everything.
Please join together in a show of support for the ethical and humane care of animals with the power of the people around the world.

Thankyou

 

Tumbo’s Petition :
http://www.thepetitionsite.com/962/725/234/tumbo-this-disabled-cheetah-cub-of-kenya-cee4life/

Tumbo’s FB Group:
http://www.facebook.com/groups/savetumbo/

Tumbo’s Online Event :
http://www.facebook.com/events/433067866750864/

 

 

Poem for Tumbo

October 10, 2012 at 1:42 am (Interviews)

When I was born, I was not strong

I tried to run, but my legs were wrong

My mother, my siblings had to say goodbye

The predators would kill them, if for me they had to fight

I sat in the grass and night time fell

Shaddows moved, a friend? I couldnt tell

In the morning sunshine, I heard children talking

So I sat up high, I began calling

They carried me gentley to a house nearby

A kind lady smoothed me, and looked into my eyes

“Hello little one, help is on its way”

Now I had a home, a safe place to stay

As I got older my legs became more bent

But I still swam and rolled and leapt

These things that walk around on two legs

Were pretty nice and made sure I was fed

There was a favourite place where I could be king

On top of the anthill, I could see everything

I might have been bent and strange in shape

But I galloped, not ran, through all the landscape

When my legs got tired, two hands carried me

The pain would ease, until I would sleep

These strange two legged things it seems

Was what I had for my family

One morning I woke up and the Lady was crying

There were three other people, a small cage, I felt I was dying

They took me away, I feel so ill

I look out the cage to see my last anthill

Where am I now, where is my home

My river, my grasses, my mountains are gone

Im crying now, my legs hurt so bad

What did I do that made them so mad

Now days and nights flow endlessly

I try to be quiet, but my legs hurt greatly

Where are two hands to comfort me

I wish someone would help me

We hear you calling Tumbo, we’re trying hard

Please be strong, the world hears your heart

If you get lonely, look to your left

The two Mara boys will be your friend

You see, some people dont understand that animals feel

They dont know a small cage is not what you need

There’s thousands of people who love you Tumbo

We will be your voice, we promise, we wont let go

Please sign and share Tumbo’s petition –
http://www.thepetitionsite.com/962/725/234/tumbo-this-disabled-cheetah-cub-of-kenya-cee4life/

 

 

An Event has been Created for Little Tumbo, to bring Awareness to his Story and to Hopefully help reach the Targeted Goal on his Petition . Please Join and help Tumbo xox Thank you!

Tuesday, April 30, 2013 at 10:00am in EDT at Online! Here> FB, Twitter, Groups, Pages, Orgs. “Everywhere you can Think to Spread TUMBO’S STORY and his PETITION

 

 

Tumbo – One of the most extraordinary things about Tumbo was that this little disabled cheetah loved to swim. His little legs were getting so strong with this as part of his exercise regime which also included long walks each day, enrichment, and physical therapy. It is an ABSOLUTE CRIME that he is now confined to a sub standard small enclosure, and receiving NOTHING close to the prescribed Veterinary care which he received at Lemartis. In fact Tumbo’s daily life is now so negative that I fear for his life. He is in a 3m x 3m cage, with NOTHING. He has been observed crying consistently. Pain and deliberate neglect is currently surrounding this little boy. THIS IS UNACCEPTABLE.

This is a severe animal welfare issue, this MUST be remedied immediately.

As stated by the Kenyan Veterinarian Journal – Animal welfare is the PHYSICAL and PSYCHOLOGICAL state of an animal as regards its attempt to cope with the environment. An animal\’s welfare is COMPROMISED if it does not enjoy the five fundamental freedoms, namely: freedom from hunger or thirst; freedom from thermal or PHYSICAL DISCOMFORT; freedom from PAIN, INJURY and disease; freedom from fear and DISTRESS and; freedom to indulge in NORMAL BEHAVIOUR PATTERNS – TUMBO IS EXPERIENCING ELEMENTS IN ALL FIVE CATEGORIES. HELP CEE4LIFE HELP TUMBO. Please sign the petition and NEVER GIVE UP

http://www.thepetitionsite.com/962/725/234/tumbo-this-disabled-cheetah-cub-of-kenya-cee4life/

Photo: Tumbo - One of the most extraordinary things about Tumbo was that this little disabled cheetah loved to swim. His little legs were getting so strong with this as part of his exercise regime which also included long walks each day, enrichment, and physical therapy. It is an ABSOLUTE CRIME that he is now confined to a sub standard small enclosure, and recieving NOTHING close to the prescribed Veterinary care which he recieved at Lemartis. In fact Tumbo's daily life is now so negative that I fear for his life. He is in a 3m x 3m cage, with NOTHING. He has been observed crying consistently. Pain and deliberate neglect is currently surrounding this little boy. THIS IS UNACCEPTABLE.<br />
This is a severe animal welfare issue, this MUST be remedied immediately.As stated by the Kenyan Veterinarian Journal – Animal welfare is the PHYSICAL and PSYCHOLOGICAL state of an animal as regards its attempt to cope with the environment. An animal\’s welfare is COMPROMISED if it does not enjoy the five fundamental freedoms, namely: freedom from hunger or thirst; freedom from thermal or PHYSICAL DISCOMFORT; freedom from PAIN, INJURY and disease; freedom from fear and DISTRESS and; freedom to indulge in NORMAL BEHAVIOUR PATTERNS – TUMBO IS EXPERIENCING ELEMENTS IN ALL FIVE CATEGORIES. HELP CEE4LIFE HELP TUMBO. Please sign the petition and NEVER GIVE UP<br />
<a href=http://www.thepetitionsite.com/962/725/234/tumbo-this-disabled-cheetah-cub-of-kenya-cee4life/&#8221; width=”403″ height=”403″ />

 

 

  • A three-month-old lion cub set about playfully taunting her siblings
  • She sunk her teeth and claws into her brother before they turned on her
  • The lion pride were photographed in the Serengeti plains, Tanzania

By Alex Ward

PUBLISHED: 16:22 GMT, 3 October 2012 | UPDATED: 18:18 GMT, 3 October 2012

 

Sibling rivalry starts from a young age and for this cheeky lion cub, taunting her older siblings was way too much fun to worry about the consequences.

The feisty female, only about three-months-old quickly set about wreaking havoc after she was the first of her pride to wake from an afternoon snooze.

But while she playfully teased her older siblings, it was not long until they ganged up on her, pushed her in the mud and chased her up a tree in the Serengeti plains in Tanzania.

Sibling rivalry: This three-month-old lion cub playfully taunted her older siblings, sinking her teeth and claws into her brotherSibling rivalry: This three-month-old lion cub playfully taunted her older siblings, sinking her teeth and claws into her brother

Wildlife photographer Elliott Neep captured the pride playtime in stunning photographs.

Mr Neep, 38, from Wantage, Oxfordshire, said: ‘It is always special to witness amazing scenes like this, and what made these images so special was the tenacity of the young cub.

‘Lions can be both the most boring and the most thrilling of animals to watch.

‘Most of the time they laze around and sleep and other times, like this, they are full of energy, chasing and fighting.’

The feisty female cub quickly set about wreaking havoc after she was the first of her pride to wake from an afternoon snooze, cheekily teasing this siblingFearless feline: The feisty female cub quickly set about wreaking havoc after she was the first of her pride to wake from an afternoon snooze, cheekily teasing this sibling

 

It was not long before the cub became the target of the tauntingTwo can play that game: It was not long before the cub became the target of the taunting

Suddenly her siblings looked much bigger and stronger than her as they started to fight backTenacious tot: Suddenly her siblings looked much bigger and stronger than her as they started to fight back

 

Mr Neep, who works as a photographic guide, said the photographs had the ‘cute factor’.

He said: ‘In terms of how I rate these photos, they are certainly up there on the cute factor alone.

‘The images of the cub biting the back of the other cub and the tail biting one are particular favourites of mine.

The cub was soon outnumbered as her siblings ganged up on her, pushing her in the mudBitten off more than she could chew: The cub was soon outnumbered as her siblings ganged up on her, pushing her in the mud

The cub climbed a tree in an attempt to get away from her siblings, now set on getting her back No where to run: The cub climbed a tree in an attempt to get away from her siblings, now set on getting her back

 

Wildlife photographer Elliott Neep said lions spend a lot of time lazing about but that they also have outbursts of energy like thisBoring or thrilling: Wildlife photographer Elliott Neep said lions spend a lot of time lazing about but that they also have outbursts of energy like this

‘When we arrived at the scene all was quiet and the lions were sleeping in the shade but the skies had grown increasingly heavy and rain was imminent.

‘The first lions to wake were two young cubs, who started suckling from their mother, she was in a very bad mood though and snarled at them.

‘As the young female continued to fight and chase the older cubs, they pinned her to the ground and rolled her around in the mud.

The lion pride were in the Serengeti plains in TanzaniaPlaying on the plains: The lion pride were in the Serengeti plains in Tanzania

‘The cub was following its natural instinct when she fled to the higher ground of the tree.’

The Serengeti plains are dominated by vast short grass plains populated by wildebeest, large numbers of gazelle and predators including lions, cheetahs and leopards.

There are also lakes in the area which attract plenty of flamingos and smaller cats such as Serval and Caracal.

As well as lions, the plains are home to wildebeest, gazelle and other predators such as cheetahs and leopardsHabitat for many: As well as lions, the plains are home to wildebeest, gazelle and other predators such as cheetahs and leopards

 

 

 

 

 
http://www.thepetitionsite.com/962/725/234/tumbo-this-disabled-cheetah-cub-of-kenya-cee4life/

 

 

 

Please join Cee4lifes page for TUMBO the disabled Cheetah Cub who is looking at a life of severe unethical care and severe welfare issues at Nairobi Orphanage, Kenya. Please lets join together and put the pressure on. THIS IS DELIBERATE CRUELTY AGAINST RECOMMENDED VETERINARY DIAGNOSIS AND CARE. TUMBO WILL DIE IF HE IS IGNORED – Please join –
http://www.facebook.com/groups/356477114427900/?fref=ts

 

Our pic of the day shows a beautiful leopard in Tsavo, Kenya, taken by Panthera‘s Kaplan Scholar Laila Bahaa-el-din. Today, Panthera is protecting the leopards of S Africa thru our Munyawana Leopard Project – the most comprehensive leopard study to date –
http://bit.ly/flEZT1
. Read cool ‘cat facts’ about the leopard @
http://bit.ly/exp0Oj
& see Laila’s vids of another African cat-the golden cat @
http://bit.ly/pNCOoz
Photo: Our pic of the day shows a beautiful leopard in Tsavo, Kenya, taken by Panthera's Kaplan Scholar Laila Bahaa-el-din. Today, Panthera is protecting the leopards of S Africa thru our Munyawana Leopard Project - the most comprehensive leopard study to date - http://bit.ly/flEZT1. Read cool 'cat facts' about the leopard @ http://bit.ly/exp0Oj & see Laila's vids of another African cat-the golden cat @ http://bit.ly/pNCOoz

 

9 September 2012
Photo tour, Masai Mara National Reserve, Kenya

This day was a cheetah day. We finished the last drive with the first group with a sighting of the cheetah mother and her four cubs waking up from the night’s rest, stretching

and then getting into a playful mood. After breakfast and saying goodbye at the airstrip the next group arrived. Our afternoon started with that same cheetah mother eating a recently caught gazelle. A storm approached and we made our way back to camp, photographing some landscapes with trees and zebras against a dramatic sky backdrop.