Zoological Society of London

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http://www.wildlifevetsinternational.org/new-concessions-for-tigers/

 

Radio collaring tigers in a mixed use landscape

Most information about Sumatran tigers comes from conflict tigers that have been rescued, radio-collared and released. These tigers have been successfully relocated and settled down. Long term data on how tigers use their habitats, however, cannot be derived from these tigers as the collars often fail within a year. This new initiative aims to use newer GPS collars that have a longer life and the ability for the tiger to ‘send an email’ to the researcher every 24 hours detailing its movements. The behaviour of conflict tigers is, by definition, not necessarily the same as non-conflict or “normal” tigers

First the tigers have to be caught…

Project partners Zoological Society of London (ZSL) and Taman Safari Indonesia (TSI) have invited WVI big cat anaesthesia expert John Lewis to train project staff in using box traps – deployed by the appropriate wildlife authorities in the area to safely immobilise the tiger before correctly fitting a GPS collar and taking vital biometric and health data. This data includes sex, length, weight, size of paws, temperature, heart rate etc. Any ectoparasites (ticks etc) will be collected, a faecal sample retained to identify intestinal parasites, and blood and hair samples taken.Samples must be stored correctly so the maximum amount of information can be obtained, including which infectious agents (especially viruses) the tiger has been exposed to and which ones it may be carrying. This information will be compared to data collected from conflict tigers to identify if disease could be a cause of changes in the tigers’ behaviour and if there are any threats to the tiger from disease. In the longer term, it will be possible to compare such information with data from tigers in different habitats to determine whether habitat type determines disease exposure patterns.

Study area is South Sumatra, a mixed landscape of a large National Park and several small protected areas. Forested areas in between are made up of concessions for palm oil, forestry, oil and gas. Through camera trapping it is known that tigers and other wildlife are using these areas.

WVI big cat specialist, John Lewis has worked with the Indonesian Department of Forestry (PHKA) and ZSL over the years to assist with training vets and field staff in safe immobilisation of conflict tigers, sample taking and storage protocols and disease management.

This new and exciting phase of tiger conservation in Sumatra is wholly inclusive of all stakeholders in the area and will add an important piece to the jigsaw of tiger ecology.

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Thanks to Brandywine Zoo of the Delaware Zoological Society in Wilmington, Delaware, for making a donation to the Tiger Conservation Campaign! Their support is helping keep wild Amur tigers safe and healthy in the Russian Far East. We hope you ‘like’ this photo of Brandywine Zoo’s Amur tiger, Zhanna!

 

11 Jan, 2013, 02.07PM IST, IANS

LONDON: Fast-disappearing mangrove forests of the Sundarbans pose a question mark over the future of the Royal Bengal Tiger, an endangered species, say scientists.

Rapid deterioration in mangrove health is causing as much as 200 metres of the vegetation-rich coast to disappear annually in the Sunderbans, according to zoologists.

Nathalie Pettorelli, from the Zoological Society of London (ZSL) and senior study author, said: “Our results indicate a rapidly retreating coastline that cannot be accounted for by the regular dynamics of the Sundarbans.

Degradation is happening fast, weakening this natural shield for India and Bangladesh.”

‘Sundarban’ meaning ‘beautiful forest’ in Bengali, is the largest block of continuous mangrove forest in the world, native to nearly 500 species of reptile, fish, bird and mammals, including the world famous Royal Bengal Tiger, the journal Remote Sensing reports.

Thriving human development, rising global temperatures, degradatin of natural protection from tidal waves and cyclones is inveitably leading to species loss in this richly biodiverse part of the world, according to a ZSL statement.

Sarah Christie, ZSL’s tiger conservation expert, says: “The Sundarbans is a critical tiger habitat; one of only a handful of remaining forests big enough to hold several hundred tigers. To lose the Sundarbans would be to move a step closer to the extinction of these majestic animals.”

Although mangroves are rare, they are an important barrier against climate change, providing protection to coastal areas from tsunamis and cyclones. They are also the most carbon-rich forests in the tropics with high carbon sequestration potential, meaning their degradation and loss substantially reduce our ability to mitigate, and adapt to, predicted changes in climatic conditions.

Mangroves comprise less than one percent of all forest areas across the world, amounting to roughly half the size of the UK. It is essential that the protection of mangroves becomes a priority, particularly for the charismatic species which will disappear with them if no action is taken to preserve their habitat.

 

Jeremy Hance
mongabay.com
November 12, 2012

new.mongabay.com

Camera trap catches intruders in Lazovsky Nature Reserve. Photo courtesy of the Zoological Society of London (ZSL).
Camera trap catches intruders in Lazovsky Nature Reserve. Photo courtesy of the Zoological Society of London (ZSL).

 

Remote camera traps, which take photos or video when a sensor is triggered, have been increasingly used to document rare and shy wildlife, but now conservationists are taking the technology one step further: detecting poachers. Already, camera traps set up for wildlife have captured images of park trespassers and poachers worldwide, but for the first time conservationists are setting camera traps with the specific goal of tracking illegal activity.

Dubbed the “Forest Eyes” project, scientists with the Zoological Society of London (ZSL) have installed and camouflaged 30 camera traps in two Russian far east protected areas: Lazovsky Nature Reserve and Zov Tigra National Park. The group hopes the camera traps will help to shed new light on trespassers in the parks, home to at most twenty Amur tigers (Panthera tigris altaica).

“The images from camera traps set up for humans will better inform us of any illegal activity in protected areas, so inspectors can be notified and patrols changed accordingly.” explains ZSL tiger conservationist Linda Kerley in a press release. “We will be able to monitor the area more effectively and ensure we are doing all we can to try and change people’s attitudes and behaviors towards poaching.”

Amur tigers, also known as Siberian tigers, are down to around 360 animals and listed as Endangered by the IUCN Red List. While the subspecies is imperiled by habitat loss, prey decline, low genetic diversity, and human-tiger conflict, poaching for traditional Chinese medicine remains the most pressing concern.

The small tiger population in the two parks have already suffered from past poaching. Scientists believe poachers may have killed as many as seven tigers five years ago, while in the last twelve months authorities have confiscated tiger parts in three different operations.

“We hope the awareness of extra camera traps targeting people who encroach on protected areas will deter poachers from trying to kill tigers and their prey animals,” said another ZSL conservationist, Sarah Christie.

In 2010 Russia hosted a tiger summit with all 13 tiger range countries. The meeting ended with an ambitious pledged to double the number of wild tigers in the world by 2022. Amur tigers represent around 10 percent of the total wild population. Already three tiger subspecies have vanished forever.

WARNING: Graphic images below.

Setting up a camera trap in Lazovsky Nature Reserve. Photo courtesy of: ZSL.
Setting up a camera trap in Lazovsky Nature Reserve. Photo courtesy of: ZSL.

Poached Amur tiger in the region. Photo courtesy of: ZSL.
Poached Amur tiger in the region. Photo courtesy of: ZSL.

Poached Amur tiger in the region. Photo courtesy of: ZSL.
Poached Amur tiger in the region. Photo courtesy of: ZSL.

 

 Planète Tigre

http://www.facebook.com/pages/Plan%C3%A8te-Tigre/131742830190805

Hello my friends that I do not speak very little from Tigre love, Siberian Tiger, when in fact it to as many related (habitat / numbers) in the world.
We currently have more than 500 tigers in situ
This lead me to tell you about my encounter with one of the most committed women for the protection of tiger in the world Mrs. Sarah Christie London Zoo and ZLS (The Zoological Society of London is incorporated by Royal Charter) with which Tiger planet is under discussion for two joint projects, one on Sumatra and on Russia

HARBIN – Authorities in Northeast China‘s Heilongjiang province are conducting a survey to find the exact number of endangered Siberian tigers as their numbers may have increased.

Sun Haiyi, deputy head of the Wild Animals Research Institute of Heilongjiang, said the province had set up more than 20 monitoring sites. Information will be submitted to the country’s relevant authorities.

“Since 2005, wild Siberian tigers have been spotted many times by monitoring cameras in Laoye Mountain and Wanda Mountain areas in Heilongjiang,” Sun told Xinhua.

He estimated that the number of wild Siberian tigers might have increased thanks to the protection efforts in recent years. Dead tigers were also found in Wanda Mountain and Mishan area, he added.

Sun said the conservation of natural forests had contributed a lot to the restoration of the food chain of Siberian tigers.

According to a survey in 2006 and 2007, Heilongjiang has about 12 wild Siberian tigers while neighboring Jilin Province has eight to ten such tigers, the expert said.

Yang Lijuan, an official with the Dongfanghong Forestry Bureau in Heilongjiang, said the bureau would add six food supply sites, from the current four, for the prey of wild Siberian tigers this winter.

Such artificial feeding could increase the numbers of red deer and roes to ensure the food source for the Siberian tigers, Yang said.

Siberian tigers, one of the world’s rarest animal species, mainly live in east Russia, northeast China and northern part of the Korean Peninsula. Some 500 Siberian tigers currently live in the wild.

Jeremy Hance
mongabay.com
October 25, 2012

http://news.mongabay.com/2012/1025-hance-bushmeat-savanna.html

Lion with a snare around its neck.  Photo by: Egil Droge/Zambian Carnivore Program. Courtesy of Panthera
Lion with a snare around its neck. Photo by: Egil Droge/Zambian Carnivore Program. Courtesy of Panthera.

 

Bushmeat hunting has become a grave concern for species in West and Central Africa, but a new report notes that lesser-known illegal hunting in Africa’s iconic savannas is also decimating some animals. Surprisingly, illegal hunting across eastern and southern Africa is hitting big predators particularly hard, such as cheetah, lion, leopard, and wild dog. Although rarely targets of hunters, these predators are running out of food due to overhunting and, in addition, often becoming victims of snares set out for other species.

“Snaring is the most common illegal hunting method and is particularly undesirable from a conservation perspective as it is highly effective, difficult to control, unselective in terms of the genders or species of animals captured, wasteful, and has severe animal welfare implications,” reads the report which was co-authored by Panthera, the Zoological Society of London (ZSL), and the Wildlife Conservation Society (WCS).

The report finds that demand for bushmeat is growing in both eastern and southern Africa as populations boom–human populations in Africa are growing faster than anywhere else in the world–and protected areas suffer from ongoing human encroachment. In addition, bushmeat is becoming seen as a “luxury” good in urban centers, pushing some in rural communities to see illegal hunting as a new livelihood where there are few.

Snared wild dog. Photo by: Egil Droge/Zambian Carnivore Program. Courtesy of Panthera.
Snared wild dog. Photo by: Egil Droge/Zambian Carnivore Program. Courtesy of Panthera.

The bushmeat boom, which has not been largely studied across eastern and southern Africa, has put the continents big predators on notice, according to the report.

“Most cheetahs and African wild dogs occur outside protected areas, coexisting with people and their livestock, and are very vulnerable to snaring and the loss of their wild prey,” says Netty Purchase with both ZSL and WCS.

Cheetahs (Acinonyx jubatus) are currently listed as Vulnerable by the IUCN Red List, while African wild dogs (Lycaon pictus) are considered Endangered. Africa’s most well-known top predator, the lion (Panthera leo), is listed as Vulnerable with data showing it has plunged by 30 percent since 1990. Leopards (Panthera pardus) are probably doing the best of the four, and are listed as Near Threatened. All of these predators face other threats beyond illegal hunting—including habitat loss, human-wildlife conflict, and in some cases trophy hunting—but an overall decline in prey and injuries or death caused by snare cannot be overstated. For example, in Mozambique’s Niassa Reserve over half of lion mortalities are caused by snares.

The report notes that some areas have undergone “empty savanna syndrome,” similar to the more well-known “empty forest syndrome.” The ecosystem is there, but large wild mammals are simply gone due to unregulated over-hunting. In some countries, hunters have begun turning to smaller animals, as larger-bodied mammals have vanished.

Recommendations from the report include addressing human population growth through education and family planning; better land-use planning; providing alternative livelihoods and other protein sources in rural areas; encouraging tourism and sustainable-use of wildlife; as well as passing and enforcing better laws.

“Frank discussion of the issue of high levels of human population growth within and near to protected areas is required,” the freely-available report reads, “because if current trends continue, other interventions to address illegal hunting the bushmeat trade are much less likely to succeed.”

Snared cheetah recovered by a park ranger in Zambia. Photo by: Zambia Carnivore Programme.
Snared cheetah recovered by a park ranger in Zambia. Photo by: Zambia Carnivore Programme.

 

A new report published today by Panthera confirms that widespread illegal hunting & the bushmeat trade occur more frequently & with greater impact on wildlife populations in the Southern & Eastern savannas of Africa than previously thought, & if unaddressed could cause a ‘conservation crisis.’ Read our press release & the report on the drivers, impacts & solutions to address these grave issues @ http://bit.ly/RmunO5
Photo: A new report published today by Panthera confirms that widespread illegal hunting & the bushmeat trade occur more frequently & with greater impact on wildlife populations in the Southern & Eastern savannas of Africa than previously thought, & if unaddressed could cause a ‘conservation crisis.’ Read our press release & the report on the drivers, impacts & solutions to address these grave issues @ http://bit.ly/RmunO5