Beijing Conference on Snow Leopards Called “Watershed Event”

The international conference on Range-wide Conservation Planning for Snow Leopards held in Beijing, China, from 7 – 11 March, was deemed a major success by the conference organizers which included the Panthera Foundation, Wildlife Conservation Society (WCS), Snow Leopard Trust (SLT), Snow Leopard Network (SLN), and the Chinese Institute of Zoology. Conference co-Chair Dr. Tom McCarthy (SLT) labeled it “A watershed event in our common effort to save snow leopards.”

Leading conservationists and researchers, as well as government officials from 11 of 12 snow leopard range countries, were among the more than 100 conference attendees.

Founder and Executive Chairman of Panthera, Tom Kaplan, announced that organization’s commitment to an unprecedented range-wide effort to conserve snow leopards. Panthera’s offer of partnerships and collaboration, backed by substantial resources, caught the attention of the audience. The magnitude of the task ahead was echoed in keynote addresses by Dr. George Schaller (WCS), one of the first people to ever study the elusive snow leopard, and Dr. Urs Breitenmoser, co-Chair of the IUCN Cat Specialist Group, who made it clear that saving the big cats would not be easy and would require substantial effort of all concerned.

Unlike many conferences which showcase the plight of an imperiled species but take few positive steps toward their conservation, the gathering in Beijing included several work sessions that sought specific results which would be immediately applicable to preserving snow leopards across their central Asian range. The first two days were dedicated to mapping the collective knowledge of 30 experts occurrence and distribution. Led by Dr. Eric Sanderson (WCS) and Dr. David Mallon (SLN), participants worked in regional teams to map the known and suspected range of the cats and identify critical conservation units within the range. Despite past efforts to depict exactly where snow leopards can still be found, maps of their range were based on habitat models and scant data, much of it anecdotal. The map created during this conference represents the collective field data of the world’s most knowledgeable scientists, which is unprecedented for this species.

Invited speakers then shared expertise on successful conservation methods and best practices in research methods, and country teams reported on the status of snow leopard action plans across the region. The participants were then charged with using the new range maps and targeted conservation units to develop country specific actions that should be undertaken in the next several years if snow leopards are to be saved. Each country’s plan was designed with the following shared vision in mind.

A Vision for Snow Leopards over the next century:

A world where snow leopards and their wild prey thrive in healthy mountain ecosystems across all major ecological settings of their entire range, and where snow leopards are revered as unique ecological, economic, and spiritual assets.

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A full report, inclusive of all country-specific actions and the new range map, will soon be available from the co-organizers and will also be found on the Snow Leopard Network website: www.snowleopardnetwork.org

HIMALAYAN GLACIERS MAY DISAPPEAR WITHIN DECADES

Himalayan glaciers are melting fast and may disappear within decades, affecting as many as 750 million people downstream who depend on the glacial melt for their water, according to a new UN report. Rivers in the region such as the Ganges, the Indus and the Brahmaputra, as well as others criss-crossing northern India may soon become seasonal rivers, a development that has ramifications for poverty and the economies in the region, warns the report released by the UN Environment Programme (UNEP). In south Asia (Indian subcontinent), people in the Himalaya and Hindu Kush regions and those downstream who rely on glacial waters would be seriously affected. The average glacier shrank 1.4 m in 2006, compared to 0.5 m in 2005 and 0.3 m in the Eighties and Nineties.

March 18, 2008

For more information visit: http://www.kashmirobserver.com/index.php?id=3896&PHPSESSID=ec2b333cb6ad6dfb5619f02dc47e469f

Russia’s snow leopard population declines by half

Source: Russian News and Information Agency    


NOVOSIBIRSK, March 7 (RIA Novosti) – The number of snow leopards in Russia’s southwestern Siberian Altai Republic has fallen from 40 in the late 1990s to 10-15, the director of the Gorny Altai nature preserve said on Friday.

Russia has an estimated total of 100 large mountain cats, which are in the Red Book of Endangered Species.

Sergei Spitsyn said the main reason is an insufficient number of forest rangers and rampant poaching, adding that local residents often see helicopters that are used for illegal hunting.

Snow leopards are hunted for their skin, meat and bones, which are widely used in traditional Chinese medicine.

Weighing usually 35 to 55 kilograms, the snow leopard is slightly smaller than a leopard. Exceptional large males can weigh up to 75 kg. The head and body length is 100 to 130 cm, and the shoulder height is about 60 cm.

The total estimated wild snow leopard population is between 4,000 and 7,500. In addition, there are 600-700 animals in zoos around the world.

South Asian nations pledge cooperation on rampant wildlife trade

Source: WWF Web Site

An Uttar Pradesh, India seizure consisted of 70 leopard skins, four tiger skins, black buck skins, 18,000 leopard claws, and 132 tiger claws.
© Rahul Dutta, TRAFFIC India

06 Feb 2008
Kathmandu, Nepal – All eight South Asian nations have agreed to step up cooperation in addressing wildlife trade problems in the area.

The region, home to such rare and prized species as tigers, Asiatic lions, snow leopards, Asian elephants and one-horned rhinoceroses, is recognized as one of the prime targets of international organized wildlife crime networks.

Wildlife trade officials from Afghanistan, Bangladesh, Bhutan, India, the Maldives, Nepal, Pakistan and Sri Lanka met in Kathmandu last week and defined a series of joint actions under the new South Asia Wildlife Trade Initiative (SAWTI).

The direction for the initiative was given by ministers from the eight nations, at the Tenth Meeting of Governing Council for the South Asia Co-operative Environment Programme (SACEP) last year.

“The agreement reached on SAWTI puts in place the foundations for a cooperative effort to crack down on illegal trade and to improve the management of wild animals and plants that can be legally traded under national laws in the region,” said SACEP Director-General Dr Arvind A. Boaz.
Continue reading “South Asian nations pledge cooperation on rampant wildlife trade”

Long-term Ecological Study of Snow Leopards to be Launched in Mongolia

Today the Snow Leopard Trust (SLT) announced the initiation in Mongolia of the first ever long-term comprehensive ecological study of snow leopards. The program is a collaborative effort involving SLT, Snow Leopard Conservation Fund (Mongolia), Felidae Conservation Fund, Wildlife Conservation Society (WCS), Mongolia’s Ministry of Nature and Environment, and the Mongolian State University of Agriculture. Dr. Tom McCarthy, Science and Conservation Director of SLT, stated, “Although there have been several valuable studies of the species to date, most were short-term or at most 4 or 5 years in duration, and such short-term efforts simply cannot provide the understanding we need to conserve these cats.” Dr. George Schaller (WCS), who conducted some of the first field studies of snow leopards, concurred, saying, Long-term studies of tigers and lions have provided important insights into the lives of these cats and their prey. Now, for the first time, the snow leopard is the long overdue focus of such an invaluable effort, one that will, I am certain, contribute greatly to the conservation of this beautiful cat and its mountain environment.” The Mongolian study will run for a minimum of 10 years, and likely for 20 years or more.

Mongolia was selected as the site of the study because the country hosts the second largest population of the endangered cats, with 1,000 or more likely remaining out of a global population of 3,500 to 7,000. SLT also maintains one of its largest conservation programs for the species in Mongolia, using an innovative community-based approach to work with local people in over 27 communities in 7 provinces all along the country’s Altai mountains, a snow leopard stronghold. Over 400 herder families participate in a handicraft-based economic incentive program, coupled with anti-poaching efforts, to conserve a predator they once viewed only as a threat to livestock. The large snow leopard population, in conjunction with a well established conservation program, made Mongolia a logical choice for the new research effort.

In addition to being the world’s leading snow leopard conservation organization, SLT has long been at the forefront of snow leopard research. SLT recently teamed with two leading conservation geneticists, Dr. Lisette Waits (University of Idaho) and Dr. Warren Johnson (National Cancer Institute), to develop molecular genetic tools for individual identification of snow leopards from hair and fecal samples, thus allowing non-invasive population monitoring. SLT was the first to broadly apply these methods in the field in China, Kyrgyzstan, and most recently Mongolia, with encouraging results. “Research is critical to planning appropriate conservation actions and then measuring their outcome,” offered SLT’s Executive Director, Brad Rutherford, “and we employ a variety of cutting-edge research tools.” The new Mongolia study will utilize a suite of methodologies, such as genetics and automated cameras, to learn more about these rare and elusive cats.

While “non-invasive” methods hold much promise, there are many fundamental questions about snow leopard ecology and behavior that cannot be answered without the use of radio-collars. Recent technological advances will allow the use of GPS collars in this study. These collars will calculate each cat’s exact position multiple times a day, and then relay that information to researchers via satellite or ground-based radio links. By monitoring several generations of snow leopards in this manner, researchers will gain unprecedented insights on habitat use, movements, dispersal of sub-adults, adult and juvenile mortality rates and causes, intra-specific interactions, and human-snow leopard conflicts. This information will translate directly into improved conservation measures, better assuring the survival of snow leopards range-wide. Furthermore, by validating and improving upon these and other methods, the project will serve as a source for innovative research, monitoring and conservation tools that will be shared with scientists and conservationists across the region and globally.

The planned study will also provide many hands-on opportunities for training of national and international graduate students and professional biologists. A long-term goal of the program is to establish a research and educational facility in the South Gobi that will serve as a regional center for advanced training in field research and conservation. At least 3 graduate students, one each from Mongolia, Argentina, and Sweden, are expected to be among the first group of young scientists participating in the study. These students will be working alongside staff biologists from Mongolia, India, and the USA, making this a truly international collaboration from the outset.

Education will also be provided to national and provincial government officials, and most importantly to local people. “Conservation education is critical, especially for the people who share these mountains and whose lives are so closely tied to snow leopards” said Zara McDonald, President of Felidae Conservation Fund.

More information will be forthcoming as the program moves forward and will also be available on the Snow Leopard Trust and Felidae Conservation Fund websites.

www.snowleopard.org www.felidaefund.org

info@snowleopard.org info@felidaefund.org

BBC Video Clip and Article on Radio Collar

Source: BBC Online
Collar ‘key’ to snow leopard secrets

By Rebecca Morelle
Science reporter, BBC News


Bayad-e-Kohsaar (Snow Leopard Trust)


Snow leopard captured on BBC wildlife fil


Lying somewhere in the mountainous, snow-cloaked terrain of Pakistan’s Tooshi Game Reserve is a collar that could help unlock the secrets of the elusive snow leopard.

For the past year, this piece of hi-tech equipment has sat around the neck of a wild snow leopard, recording, via the global positioning system (GPS), almost every step of her travels as she roamed the Pakistan-Afghanistan border.

Tom McCarthy and Bayad (Snow Leopard Trust)

Snow leopard diary

And now the collar has dropped off – as it was programmed to – the hunt is under way to retrieve it and for the first time shed light on the secretive animal’s movements.

For Tom McCarthy, science and conservation director of the Snow Leopard Trust, getting hold of the collar is especially important thanks to some of the technical difficulties that the project has faced over the last 14 months.

In November 2006, he and his team captured a 35kg (75lb) female snow leopard – who they named Bayad-e-Kohsaar (Urdu for In Memory of the Mountains) – in the Chitral Gol National Park in Pakistan and fitted the satellite collar.

Continue reading “BBC Video Clip and Article on Radio Collar”

Announcement ~ International Snow Leopard Conference Beijing, China 9 – 11 March 2008

I am very pleased to announce that the International Snow Leopard Conference will take place from 9-11 March in Beijing, China.Please see the attached announcement for details, and don’t hesitate to contact me at heather@snowleopardnetwork.org if you have any questions or concerns.

Be sure to keep checking back for updates as plans develop!

~ Announcement ~
International Snow Leopard Conference
Beijing, China
9 – 11 March 2008

Panthera Foundation, Wildlife Conservation Society, Snow Leopard Trust,
and Snow Leopard Network
will jointly host an international conference on: Range-wide Conservation Planning for Snow Leopards.

The conference’s theme reflects the urgent need to bring together the most current knowledge of the species and set conservation strategies accordingly. Invited speakers will cover such relevant topics as:
– Community-based Conservation
– Threat Interventions
– Research Methods, and
– Range Country Status and Planning
At this time all invited speaker positions are filled. However, the conference is open for attendance to all interested parties. Information regarding conference registration and hotel options, will soon be available on the Snow Leopard Network website www.snowleopardnetwork.org

We regret that no additional travel grants are available.

See below for provisional agenda and speaker information. Leading experts in the field of snow leopard research and conservation will bring a wealth of information to the conference that will be a benefit to all persons interested in the future of this magnificent cat. We hope you can join us.

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International Snow Leopard Conference
Provisional Agenda
9 March Day One of Snow Leopard Symposium

Opening Session Tom McCarthy Facilitator
8:00 am – Opening remarks
8:05 am – Welcome by Institute of Zoology
8:15 am – Introductory talk & welcome Government of China
8:30 am – Welcome by Tom Kaplan – Panthera
8:40 am – Keynote speech: George Schaller

Working Session I:
Community Based Conservation Initiatives Jennifer Snell Rullman Facilitator
9:00 am Introductory remarks by facilitator
9:10 am Handicraft programs A. Bayarjargal
9:30 am Homestays and corral improvements Rinchen Wangchuk
9:50 am Livestock Husbandry/vaccinations Jaffar ud Din
10:10 am Trophy hunting as a conservation tool Mumtaz Malik
10:30 am Break
10:50 am Livestock Insurance and Grazing set-asides Charudutt Mishra
11:10 am Community-based Conservation Education Pranav Trivedi
11:40 am Economic incentives for communities: pros and cons Shafqat Hussain
Noon – Roundtable discussion on community-based conservation
1:00 pm – Break

Working Session II:
Management Issues Urs Breitenmoser Facilitator
2:00 pm Introductory Remarks by facilitator
2:10 pm Anti-Poaching/Enforcement Thorsten Harder
2:30 pm Training: Who, What, Where, and How Tony Lynam
2:50 pm Protected Areas, Corridors, and Stepping Stones: Landscape Level Planning for Snow
Leopard Conservation Eric Sanderson
3:10 pm Role of Transboundary Protected Areas Peter Zahler
3:30 pm Roundtable discussion on enforcement, training, and landscape level planning
3:45 pm – coffee break

Working Session III:
Status of national Snow Leopard Policy and the role of the SLSS Open Facilitator
4:05 pm – Remarks by facilitator
4:10 pm – Snow Leopard conservation policy in Uzbekistan Alexander Esipov
4:20 pm – Snow Leopard conservation policy in Russia Mikhail Paltsyn
4:30 pm – Snow Leopard conservation policy in Pakistan Ashiq Ahmad Khan
4:40 pm – Snow Leopard conservation policy in Mongolia Galsandorj Naranbaatar
4:50 pm – Snow Leopard conservation policy in India Yash Veer Bhatnagar
5:00 pm – Snow Leopard conservation policy Nepal Som Ale
5:10 pm – Snow Leopard conservation policy Bhutan Open
5:20 pm – The common thread: SLSS (is it helping?) David Mallon
5:35 pm – Roundtable discussion on the way forward
6:00 pm – close of day
10 March Day Two of Symposium

Working Session IV:
Research & Monitoring Techniques and Methods Jiang Zhigang Facilitator
Monitoring snow leopard numbers and trends
8:00 am – Introductory remarks by Facilitator
8:15 am – Monitoring a cryptic carnivore using occupancy models Raghu Chundawat
8:35 am – Camera trapping to monitor snow leopard Rodney Jackson
8:55 am – Genetic techniques for snow leopard population monitoring Jan Janecka
9:15 am – Conservation canines – feces ID by dogs Megan Parker
9:35 am – Tying the methods together – what works and what next? Kim Murray Berger
10:00 am – Coffee Break
Ecological Research
10:20 am – Advances in GPS collars: successes, problems and outlook Tom McCarthy
10:40 am – Predator-prey: What’s known, what’s needed, and how to get it Sandro Lovari
11:00 am – Highlights of other felid research: leopards and cheetahs Luke Hunter
11:30 am – Roundtable discussion on snow leopard research techniques
12:30 pm – lunch

Working Session V:
Snow Leopard Conservation Unit Breakout Groups Eric Sanderson Facilitator
1:30 pm – Snow Leopard Conservation Unit Breakout Groups –
discussion of conservation needs and priorities
3:00 pm – Coffee Break
3:30 pm – Country Level Snow Leopard Conservation Breakout Groups – Continued
11 March Day Three of Symposium

Working Session VI:
Country Presentations on Priority Conservation Initiatives Brad Rutherford
Facilitator
Reports by government or other national representatives based on Working Session V.
12:45 pm – Lunch break

Working Session VII:
Resolutions of the Conference Ashiq Ahmad Khan Facilitator
1:45 pm – Critical next steps to be agreed to by all parties
3:30 pm Official end of meeting

Drink Vodka, Save the Snow Leopard

Drink vodka cocktails, save the snow leopard

Source: Smart Planet News

Endangered snow leopards and the new vodka drink

It’s estimated that there are only 3,000 to 7,000 snow leopards left in the wild worldwide, and the outlook is bleak as poachers continue to hunt them down for their incredibly attractive furs. Thankfully, the conservation effort to protect them is set to get a boost from the animals’ alcoholic namesake, Snow Leopard Vodka.

The premium vodka brand, which has until now only been available at swanky cocktail bars in London and Manchester, is now starting to appear in supermarkets like Waitrose, and the company will be generously donating 15 per cent of its profits to protecting endangered species. The company has also set up a charity, called the Snow Leopard Trust UK, to handle the efforts in collaboration with the Snow Leopard International Trust and other wildlife charities.

The vodka is produced in Poland from batches of natural spring water and a grain called spelt. Because spelt has a naturally thick husk, it has the added benefit of being able to grow easily without the use of pesticides.

“This is not just any vodka from Poland, it is one of the best premium spirits on the market,” says Xhulio Sina, Bar Manager of Sketch, Mayfair. “Snow Leopard Vodka has a long and smooth finish, while being strong and gentle in the mouth. This is what I call a true vodka”.

See next page for more information and some delicious recipes!
Continue reading “Drink Vodka, Save the Snow Leopard”

Snow leopard populations in Kyrgyzstan shrinking

SLN Member Alexander Vereschagin advocates a local and global approach to snow leopard conservation.

Source: Islamic Republic News Agency

Khabar — Snow leopard populations continue to shrink, in the last decade alone its numbers falling by 40 percent in some countries.

Kyrgyz scientists cite extermination by humans as one of the reasons behind the statistics.

20 years ago Kyrgyzstan had the largest snow leopard habitat when the mountains of the Tien Shan became probably the best shelter for the animals.

A secluded den in the hard-to-reach highlands helped the snow leopards to survive.

Alexander Vereschagin, research fellow of Sarychat-Ertash reserve says 2.5 or 3 thousand snow leopards lived there.

Continue reading “Snow leopard populations in Kyrgyzstan shrinking”