Vladimir Putin

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Russian Federation,Environment/Wildlife, Tue, 26 Feb 2013 IANS

http://www.newstrackindia.com/newsdetails/2013/02/26/19–17-Amur-tigers-died-in-Russia-in-2012-.html

Moscow, Feb 26 (IANS/RIA Novosti) At least 17 Amur tigers died in Russia’s far eastern territories over the past year, most of them due to human action, wildlife experts said.

Another eight big cats were saved from death by environmental officials and activists, the Primorye region-based Phoenix Fund said. Most of the animals were cubs orphaned by hunters.

The statistics were based on media reports about tiger-related incidents.

A list of such incidents released by the fund indicated the toll could have been as high as 25, if unconfirmed deaths were factored in that were supported by circumstantial evidence, such as abandoned cubs.

“The losses may be irreversible, given how they deplete the (species’) gene pool,” wrote Sergei Bereznyuk, head of Phoenix, on the fund’s website.

Phoenix was founded in 2006 and is running its own tiger and leopard conservation efforts.

Tiger hunting remains a profitable business because Russia still has not outlawed trafficking of tiger derivatives, which are highly prized in Chinese traditional medicine, Bereznyuk said.

A bill outlawing such trade has been pending review in the Russian parliament since last year.

The Amur tiger was on the brink of extinction in the 1940s due to over-hunting.

Conservation efforts – supported recently by Russian President Vladimir Putin – allowed the population to reach some 450, though growth has slowed since the 1990s.

–IANS/RIA Novosti

pm/

Potentially good news for the Siberian tiger, from the President of Russia’swebsite, with the prospect of making tiger offenses crimes rather than merely ‘administrative’ offenses …”Sergei Ivanovheld a meeting on the conservation of Siberian tigers.

“The Chief of Staff of the Presidential Executive Office noted that currently, keeping, buying, selling and transportingrare animals and their derivatives is subject to administrative penalty only.”Sergei Ivanov suggested introducing criminal sanctions for capturing, selling and transporting animals listed in the Red Data Book as well as their derivatives, and for their transportation across the Russian state border.”The National Siberian Tiger Programme was adopted in 2010. Russia is the only nation where the number of tigers has grown significantly since the mid-20th century and has been stable for the last ten years.”

Original article at
http://eng.state.kremlin.ru/face/4549

In Russia, administrative punishment is intended as an educational corrective to less serious offences and penalties include a warning (public censure), fine, correctional tasks, confiscation of property, arrest, and temporary deprivation of some special rights.

 

14:54 27/09/2012
MOSCOW, September 27 (RIA Novosti)

Russia’s small population of highly-endangered Amur tigers has almost halved in the last seven years despite attempts to protect them, the International Fund for Animal Welfare (IFAW) said on Thursday, ahead of Sunday’s Tiger Day.

Just 80 of the big cats remain in the wild in the Amur Region in Russia’s Far East, according to monitoring in 16 zones there, down from 120 in the period 2004-5.

Habitat shrinkage and a declining food base continue, despite measures to protect the animals put in place after the 2010 Tiger Summit in St. Petersburg, IFAW says. “Every year there are more orphan tigers, which is a sign of a falling population and the rate of fall in the population today represents a threat to their existence.”

“The system of protection for them is complex and incoherent, with different agencies having overlapping responsibilities, all on insufficient money, and the result of all this is that there is almost no-one out working in the taiga. There is an anti-poaching program and also a return to the wild scheme for young tigers found there – programs funded by IFAW for many years – but the population is still falling,” IFAW Russia director Maria Vorontsova said.

“Russia must strictly protect the tiger’s habitat, stop the barbaric and illegal destruction of the forest and implement a rigorous anti-poaching campaign, both against tiger-hunters and those hunting their prey,” she said. Russian law does not punish poachers caught in possession of tiger pelts, or other animal parts, she added.

In August 2012, Primorye police confiscated eight tiger skins from the head of a band of poachers but could only prosecute him for arms possession offences, she explained.

“The effort and means is there, but we need to add the state’s will and responsibility. Or Tiger Day risks becoming a day when we will have tears in our eyes,” she said.

Since 2000, Tiger Day has been marked annually on the last Sunday of September in the Far East city of Vladivostok, and is supported by the city and regional authorities and IFAW.

 

 

en.rian.ru

Amur Leopard: The Cat That Should Have Died

Amur Leopard: The Cat That Should Have Died

© RIA Novosti.

14:54 18/09/2012
BARABASH/MOSCOW, September 18 (Alexey Eremenko, RIA Novosti)

It all began when then-Russian Deputy Prime Minister Sergei Ivanov saw a movie about leopards.

“We’d be nowhere without him,” said Yury Darman of World Wildlife Fund Russia, who spent a decade trying to save the Amur leopard, the rarest of leopard subspecies.

“It’s really about Ivanov, not the leopard,” Darman said. “The leopard was here forever, but then Ivanov came along.”

The educational film, Save Each of the Survivors!, which Ivanov saw in 2010, prompted the man once tipped to be President Vladimir Putin’s successor to lobby for the creation of the world’s only nature reserve for the near-extinct big cat.

Now the leopards, which reside in a less than ideal location for an endangered species to live in, have a shot at surviving, ecologists say.

But they still face plenty of dangers, including wildfires, hungry tigers, a shrinking gene pool and marines with hunting rifles.

Also threatening their survival are things that big cats usually do not have to deal with, like rural poverty, the state of Russian exports and even the shortcomings of the country’s youth policy.

© RIA Novosti. Alexey Eremenko

Yury Darman, the head of WWF Russia’s far eastern branch

At least there were 13 leopard cubs born last year, up from zero in 2001, Darman said.

The Last of the Leopards

“In theory, the Amur leopard should have died out a decade ago,” said Sergei Khokhryakov, deputy director of the Land of the Leopard national park which is home to the last 40 to 50 Amur leopards. “There is some factor we underestimate or don’t understand about it.”

The far eastern leopard, one of nine subspecies of Panthera pardus across the globe, once ranged as far as Beijing in the west and the coast of the Sea of Japan in the east, as well as throughout the Korean peninsula.

Now all it has left is an area some 5,000 square kilometers wide, mostly in Russia’s Primorye region – a tiny blotch on the world map.

© RIA Novosti. Alexey Eremenko

Sergei Khokhryakov facing Harlequin, the pet of the Land of the Leopard’s office. Bigger cats are harder to spot.

The Amur leopard was placed on a protected species list as early as 1956, but the ban was hard to enforce. Border guard officers wanting to transfer from the Far East to some less remote place were rumored to be charged two leopard skins by their superiors, environmentalists say.

By the early 2000’s, only some 30 leopards remained in the wild, including only five fertile females. Some 200 Amur leopards live in captivity, but most are descendants of only two males, which increases the risks of inbreeding and its inherent health problems.

“When I first came here, I didn’t want to work on the leopard at all,” Darman said. “I thought it was a lost cause.”

Khokhryakov said he felt the same, but then national pride kicked in. “How come we can send stuff to Mars but not save a species at home?” he asked.

Bad Neighborhood

The Khasan district, the last refuge of the Amur leopard, is not really a good place for a far-ranging reclusive cat thriving on roe deer and the occasional dog.

A closed military zone in Soviet times, the district saw its economy virtually ruined when the army pulled out after the USSR’s perestroika reforms, leaving kilometers of empty barracks.

Left unemployed, many locals turned to poaching just to feed their families. Professional poachers also emerged, butchering salmon for caviar, boiling frogs for fat, a precious commodity in China, and inflicting other damage on local food chains that are topped by leopards and tigers.

Some poachers specifically targeted leopards, though they are now “over and done with,” Darman said with a scowl.

The locals also use fire as a primary means of clearing stubble in fields, not bothering too much if it spreads to the forest afterwards, threatening the cats’ habitat.

Even the Ivanov-backed nature reserve burned unhindered for days this spring, said WWF employee Andrei Fereferov.

He saved the day back then by raising a media fuss, which prompted the regional authorities to dispatch enough people and equipment to swiftly put out the fire. That was despite earlier claims that they had no resources for the job.

In some places, the local economy actually thrived: a railway and a federal highway pass through the area, serving both a stream of tourists heading for the beaches in the district’s south and an inflow of goods to local ports.

At its peak, the traffic is 11 cars per minute, which makes it almost impossible for animals to safely cross the road. Even a tigress died under the wheels three years ago, and though no leopards have been hit, a lot of their prey is becoming roadkill, diminishing the food base.

Construction of a gas pipeline to China across the district is also underway. And that’s not to mention the three firing ranges and the legal hunting grounds that the military, including the marines of the Pacific Fleet, has kept here and puts to active use.

“The fleet petitioned to not include the hunting grounds in the reserve because it’s needed for the 5,000 sailors and their wives and children,” said Svetlana Titova, who oversees protected areas at WWF Russia’s far eastern branch.

“They claimed that otherwise the combat efficiency of the Pacific Fleet will be compromised,” she said.

Another threat is the Amur tiger, also an endangered species, which is not above killing or maiming a leopard in a territorial dispute.

“The job would have been a thousand times easier had the leopard been anywhere else in the region,” said Khokhryakov, who himself previously worked to save the Amur tiger in the Lazovsky nature reserve elsewhere in Primorye.

Cat Man to the Rescue

The original nature reserve in the area, Kedrovaya Pad, spanned a mere 18,000 hectares and had a budget of just 7 million rubles ($230,000).

Environmentalists have spent years campaigning to have it expanded. “I’ve made enemies of everyone in these parts,” said Darman, himself a graduate of a college in Irkutsk in eastern Siberia.

Indeed, the local press is full of stories vehemently attacking the leopard backers, who are accused of seeking to obtain land for personal gain, and squeezing out longtime residents – a claim they indignantly dismiss.

Only the interference of Ivanov, now the chief of Kremlin staff, made it possible to overrule the resistance of local authorities and communities and set up a national park spanning 262,000 hectares.

“Putin’s protecting tigers, so Ivanov showed subordination and picked a smaller animal!” an environmental activist quipped, referring to President Vladimir Putin’s much-publicized involvement in saving the Amur tigers, some 500 of whom now live in the wild.

There is an alternative explanation. “He’s just a cat person!” said Titova of WWF.

The total protected area is set to span 370,000 hectares by the year’s end. Combined with 320,000 hectares of nature reserves on the Chinese side of the border, this will provide enough land for some 100 to 120 leopards – enough to ensure the immediate survival of the subspecies, experts say.

© RIA Novosti. Alexey Eremenko

The leopard national park sports an improvised “eco-track” complete with faded laminated photographs and wooden animals carved by inmates of a local prison

But a separate reserve population is needed to ensure the leopards are not wiped out by some epidemics, nature park deputy director Khokhryakov said. Work is underway, with a program awaiting sanction from Moscow.

Gun Under the Pillow

The Land of the Leopard houses more than 80 landowners, including several rural settlements and the Pacific Fleet marines and their firing range. Most of the inhabitants are armed, and unhappy at finding themselves residents of a national park.

“I’ve slept with a handgun under my pillow for three years,” said Khokhryakov, who used to head the nature reserve until a Moscow-ordered reshuffle this month.

More than 430 administrative offences have been recorded in connection with violations of the park in its first year alone, he said.

The WWF has launched an extensive education campaign for locals, printing out leaflets for each of the 30,000-plus district residents and making schools choose a leopard to “adopt.”

In the mid-2000’s, most locals polled by the WWF said they would shoot a leopard upon meeting it, but now the only deaths are accidental, with cats shot when mistaken for other game, Titova said.

The district has formidable potential for eco-tourism, but all it has to offer for now is an improvised “eco-track” complete with faded laminated photographs of plants and taiga wildlife, and wooden animals carved by inmates of a local prison.

© RIA Novosti. Alexey Eremenko

Typical leopard haunts in the Khasan district

Khokhryakov, who now oversees tourism at the reserve, is dismissive of regional officials’ attention to tourism development, which does not make his job any easier. “All they care about is how to stock the bar,” he says.

Money Doesn’t Save Leopards

Anatoly Belov, declared the world’s best ranger by none other than Britain’s Prince Philip in 2010, works in the Land of the Leopard.

Working on a nature reserve is not lucrative. Khokhryakov recalled how he used to feed his family in Soviet times on tiger meat confiscated from poachers (“tastes like veal,” he said).

Rangers at the Land of the Leopard earn an average 17,000-18,000 rubles ($550-580) a month, a reasonable income for the Russian countryside.

They also get various monetary bonuses and are granted overseas trips, said Sergei Bereznyuk of the Phoenix fund, a local charity that supports the reserve with money and the occasional quad bike.

Still, most of the personnel are enthusiastic professionals who are not in for the money, both Darman and Khokhryakov said.

But enthusiasm for the mission is in short supply outside the Land of the Leopard.

The WWF used to run seven “leopard’s friends groups” across the Russian Far East stocked with local teens and college students, but now, there are only enough people for three, said Titova.

“The kids just don’t care anymore,” she said.

The adults are not much better. The annual budget of the nature reserve stands at 90 million rubles – under $3 million, a fraction of the $22 billion price tag for the recent Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation summit in Primorye. Admittedly, another 3 billion rubles were earmarked for a tunnel that would spare the leopards crossing the dangerous local highway.

But most prominent nongovernmental donors are not Russian citizens or companies, but Britons and Germans, Darman said.

“Only the government can save a species,” he said. “Public groups can only do odd jobs.”

Titova pointed that the WWF has been doing the government’s job for years until Ivanov’s recent involvement.

Creating a second leopard population will cost an estimated $10 million, experts estimate. Nobody can say where the money will come from.

There are five more nature reserves and two national parks in the region, many of them bigger than the Land of the Leopard, but also underfunded and understaffed. Unfortunately for the animals there, they have no films to show to big beasts in government.