Threatened big cats can be saved by strategic and science-based conservation practices
August 12th, 2009 - 4:52 pm ICT by ANIWashington, August 12 (ANI): A new study has demonstrated that threatened big cats can truly be saved through strategic and science-based conservation practices.
The study was led by researchers from Panthera, the leading wild cat conservation organization, and the University of KwaZulu-Natal in South Africa.
After 6 years of meticulous fieldwork on the leopards in the Phinda Private Game Reserve in the KwaZulu-Natal province, they were able to confirm the leopard population bounced back following the launch of a major conservation program.
When the study began, leopards were vulnerable to high levels of both legal and illegal hunting in areas adjacent to reserves in South Africa.
Foreign trophy hunters are legally allowed to shoot a controlled quota of leopards each year, while farmers in the area persecute them because of the threat they posed to livestock and wild game.
Between 2002 and 2005, the team tracked 26 leopards and found that 23 of them wound up dead.
“Many of those leopards were killed by humans and by 2005 we realized that the numbers dying at the hands of people were too high to sustain,” said Guy Balme, a researcher from Panthera and the study’s lead author.
“We designed a conservation plan meant to reduce the worst of the problems in the hopes of bringing the leopards back,” he added.
New regulations were enacted in 2006 that dispersed the hunting pressure across the province.
The changes also recommended a ban on hunting female leopards and young animals- both of which were killed regularly by sport hunters prior to 2006- and a comprehensive plan that helped farmers avoid problems with leopards to reduce the reasons why leopards were killed.
By 2008, the evidence collected proved the plan was working. Compared to the pre-2005 era, leopards lived longer, people killed fewer, and the population grew.
As an unexpected consequence, females conceived more often and raised more cubs.
According to Balme, the constant turnover in leopards being killed by people put the population in chaos.
“Male leopards don’t help raise cubs, but they do provide essential security for ‘their’ females, protecting them from new males which routinely kill their predecessors’ cubs to improve their mating opportunities,” he said.
“With constant killing of resident males, females were trapped in a cycle where residents
were not around long enough for the cubs to be raised,” he added.
Reducing the number of leopards killed helped to re-establish stability in the population so that females had a safe window in which to raise their cubs. (ANI)
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