Showing posts with label Big Cats. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Big Cats. Show all posts

Sunday, June 1, 2014

India Takes Action Against Posing With Big Cats




India Takes Action Against Posing With Big Cats

Thank you the CZA. Now lets have other zoo organisations around the world follow suit. There is too much of this. Pulling cubs deliberately for photos or deliberately for hand rearing using any old made up excuse. Zoo staff the world over could do animals a favour by keeping their own 'posing' photos private. Posting on Facebook and elsewhere does more harm than most realise.



Leave the cubs alone!

CZA orders probe against three individuals who posted pictures of themselves holding tiger and leopard cubs on social media, besides a Bannerghatta zoo official and an NGO

The Central Zoo Authority (CZA) has taken serious note of the alarming trend of people posing with animals in Bannerghatta National Park and flaunting these pictures - which often go viral -- on social networking sites.
Clearly indicating its intention to clamp down on this fad, the premier body for zoos and zoo animals in the country has ordered a probe into individuals and an NGO in instances that are allegedly in gross violation of CZA rules. Based on a directive from their central body, which dashed off a letter on Thursday, the Karnataka Zoo Authority is probing three such cases. Such tactile association poses potential risk to the young wildlife, authorities warn. 

Wildlife activists in Bangalore first alerted the vigilance wing of the state forest department. The issue was also brought to the notice of the-now union minister Maneka Gandhi. Gandhi's People For Animals then took it up with the CZA. 

Under the scanner are an NGO, which allegedly facilitates pictures and selfies with wild animals, besides a forest official and individuals named in the complaint. 

In a directive to his counterpart in Karnataka on May 29, Bishan Singh Bonal, Member Secretary, CZA, ministry of environment and forestry, has stated, "Kindly cause an inquiry and take action as per the prevailing rule and regulations. Sub rule 5(6) of Rule 10 under Recognition of Zoo Rule 2009 (amendment 2013), reads, 'The curatorial -- The animals shall be handled only by the staff having experience and training in handling the individual animals'. Whereas, as per photographs, it seems that general visitors are allowed to pose for photography in violation of RZR, 2009 under Wildlife Protection Act, 1972. Your early action with status report is solicited." The whistleblower in this case is a 33-year-old MBA graduate Hari Krishna. Besides wildlife photography, he also runs adventure biking expeditions themed around nature and wildlife con
READ MORE
http://www.bangaloremirror.com/bangalore/cover-story/Leave-the-cubs-alone/articleshow/35855127.cms





Friday, August 16, 2013

Speak out against public handling of big cats!.





Speak out against public handling of big cats!.


It’s no secret that one of the biggest problems fueling the U.S. big cat trade is the fact that dozens of traveling zoos and roadside exhibitors, including many USDA-licensed facilities, regularly profit from charging the public a fee to pet, play with and take photos with tiger cubs and other big cats. 

The International Fund for Animal Welfare (IFAW)’s big cat database provides a map of exhibitors who currently advertise these types of interactive opportunities online. Tragically, some exhibitors even allow the public to swim with big cat cubs, forcing the animals into water in order to make even more profit. 

To the frustration of many caring animal advocates these activities are, for the most part, legal, because of an informal rule created by the USDA to only prohibit contact with cubs under 8 weeks old when their immune systems are still developing and when they are over 12 weeks old when they are dangerous. 

The result is a 4 week window during which it is legal for the public to handle big cats, so hundreds of cubs are born each year to supply these profit-making schemes. 

Sadly, some members of the public are manipulated by the exhibitors into thinking that these opportunities contribute to big cat conservation and rescue. 

But nothing could be further from the truth. 

What happens to a poor cub when he gets bigger, stronger, more dangerous and less profitable? 

That is the big unknown—but all too often, it will come down to this: he will be kept in someone’s backyard; he will be sent to a roadside zoo; he will be incessantly bred to further fuel the cub handling trade; or he will simply be killed. 

There is no reason why any member of the public should ever come in contact with wild animals and their cubs. 

You now have the opportunity to let USDA know you object to this inhumane and dangerous trade. 

In recognition of the one-year anniversary of the Zanesville tragedy, last October IFAW joined the Humane Society of the United States and other animal welfare organizations as co-petitioner of a petition for rulemaking that urges the USDA to ban all public contact with big cats and certain other exotic species. 

Thankfully, the agency has made the petition available for public comment. 

Friday, November 20, 2009

White Tiger Killed by Lions in Liberec Zoo

A White Tiger has been tragically killed by two Lions in Liberec Zoo. It appears that both Lions and the Tiger shared the same enclosure but at alternating times. Somehow the dividing door failed and the cats got together. It is one of those unfortunate incidents that can happen anywhere, in any industry. A switch fails, a light bulb goes out, a computer glitch. We all learn by these things. I sympathise. I am sure we all sympathise.

There is of course a lot of press interest which I am now going to have a pick at.

Lions kill rare white tiger at Czech Republic zoo
"Two lions at a zoo in the northern Czech Republic have killed a rare white tigress after entering her enclosure."
"White tigers - the result of a recessive gene - find it difficult to catch prey in the wild because their colouration stands out in the jungle."
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/europe/8369543.stm

Rare perhaps in the Czech Republic but White Tigers are certainly not rare in captivity. There are 200 in one private zoo in China without considering those in other world zoos and in private hands.


Lions savage rare tigress in zoo
"Two lions tore to shreds an extremely rare white tigress after penetrating her cage in"
"The zoo in Liberec is the only establishment in the Czech republic to breed the white tiger, of which only a few dozen remain in the world."
http://www.iol.co.za/index.php?set_id=1&click_id=143&art_id=nw20091119223317328C494255

So, "only a few dozen remain in the world". Interesting.

What about the 'wild'?

Is this the only white tiger cub in the wild? Newborn gets a bath from Mum in South Africa
"The reserve keep and breed the animals in an ongoing experiment to create a self-sustaining tiger population outside of the big cat’s normal home in Asia.
The tigers hunt for their own food in the several hundred hectare, electrified compound where they regularly kill animals such as wilderbeest and eland."
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/worldnews/article-1226308/Is-white-tiger-cub-wild-Newborn-gets-bath-Mum-South-Africa.html

How do you/we define wild? These hunt and kill but live in a compound. Discuss in comments below.

And a bit of nonsense

Scaredy-cat tigers
Zoo-keepers in China say their tigers have grown so tame that they're frightened of the chickens they're supposed to eat.....
http://www.ananova.com/News/story/sm_3568713.html

Tuesday, August 11, 2009

Good News for Tigers

Tom Kaplan: 'I have big plans for big cats'

US billionaire, Tom Kaplan, is funding a new Oxford University research centre in a bid to save endangered lions and tigers - and fulfill a childhood passion.

"It's time to put our asses on the line," says Tom Kaplan. "Otherwise we might as well give up." The American tough-guy slang sits incongruously with the soft voice and the immaculate business suit, but then a lot of things about Kaplan are incongruous.

Who could have predicted that a mild-mannered Oxford-educated historian, with a PhD in the politics of colonial Malaya, would make an absolute killing from mineral extraction, with assets valued at billions of dollars?

Who then could have predicted that, while still in his mid-forties, the billionaire minerals magnate would channel his energies and business acumen into saving big cats from extinction?

Peeping out from under his immaculate business suit is a bright orange wrist-band with the legend "Tigers Forever". His mission is to save tigers, he explains, not just by maintaining their present numbers, but by increasing their numbers by 50 per cent in the next 10 years. This unassuming businessman means business. Where others wring their hands, he acts.

New York-based Panthera, the charity which Kaplan founded in 2006, has rapidly become one of the biggest players in wildlife conservation in the world, with projects around the globe and spending on a scale – its various financial commitments are set to top $20 million in five years – which other agencies can only envy.

"I am a businessman because I am good at business," says Kaplan. "But big cats are my first love."

He first fell under their spell as a seven-year-old, when he was given a copy of The Maneaters of Kumaon by Jim Corbett. Soon his bedroom was lined with posters of tigers and other predatory felids. By the age of 10, he was tracking bobcats in Florida. By 11, he was jaguar-spotting in Colombia with his mother. A life-long passion had taken root.

And his love of animals runs in the family. He has been married for 10 years to Dafna, whom he met at high school in Switzerland, and who was later serving in the Israeli defence forces while he was at Oxford. They are now based in New York. Only their daughter, Orianne's fixation was snakes.

"Pop, you know you always said we should try to give something back?" she said, when she was just five. "Well, why don't we try to save indigo snakes?" Project Orianne, a Kaplan-founded snake conservation project in Georgia, was the result. A billionaire father can be a girl's best friend.

But childish sentiment alone is not going to save the world's big cats – the tigers and leopards and jaguars and other felids on the endangered species lists. Nor is money alone. For Kaplan, conservation involves the head as much as the heart.
"When I founded Panthera, I set out to procure the greatest talent in wildlife conservation. And I use that mercantile image advisedly. Whatever you are doing in life, you have to build a high-class vehicle to deliver your vision."

To that end, he has appointed Alan Rabinowitz, a fellow New Yorker and world-renowned conservationist, to be the CEO of Panthera. Rabinowitz was the driving force behind the Jaguar Corridor that now extends from Mexico to Argentina and is regarded as a model of wildlife conservation in practice. It is not enough to talk conservation; it is necessary to provide viable habitats, often spanning many different countries.

Similar "corridors" – effectively offering the big cats safe passage between their various natural habitats – are being considered for tigers in Asia and lions in Africa. One of the tiger corridors alone could stretch from Nepal to Malaysia. It is a colossal, visionary undertaking.

But outstanding leaders, as Kaplan knows from his business experience, need outstanding lieutenants. To that end, he is investing millions of dollars in endowing the scholarships and research grants needed to inspire a new generation of conservationists.

He has donated millions to his alma mater, Oxford University, where last week he welcomed students from around the world – Madagascar, Zimbabwe, Bhutan, Bolivia – to study conservation at the Wildlife Conservation Research Unit, which he is funding, and launched a new diploma course in international wildlife practice. "This is going to be the premier university-based felid conservation centre in the world," he says, with a note of pride.

When Kaplan talks about the big cats he has seen in the wild, it could be a schoolboy speaking. "I once saw a male and female tiger together in a reserve in Rajasthan. They must have mated about eight times in two hours! And after each time, the female cuffed the male, as if she was cross with him. Extraordinary."

Left to their own devices, he says, the animals would reproduce effortlessly. Unlike the giant panda, say, big cats are naturally prolific. But on a crowded planet, it can be hard to persuade people of the desirability of breeding more dangerous predators. There are now, dismayingly, more tigers in zoos than in the wild.

"People need to look at wildlife conservation in its totality," says Kaplan. "As soon as you lose the apex predator, it has harmful consequences right down the food chain."

Convincing others of that logic, winning the necessary hearts and minds, requires different strategies in different parts of the world. In Brazil, Kaplan has recently acquired huge cattle ranches on the edge of the forest. "Who would have thought it? Me, a vegetarian, buying 8,000 head of cattle?" But he knows that buying the land is the most practical way to protect his beloved jaguars. Under Brazilian law, the farmers would otherwise be entitled to shoot the jaguars if they preyed on their livestock.

He also knows that, at the intersection of forest and farmland, there will be what conservationists call an "edge effect": a flourishing eco-system at the point where two different habitats meet.

"Local communities need to be brought into the conservation process. They need to be treated as stake-holders. In a developing country like Brazil, there is huge scope for offering rural communities help with health care, say, in exchange for their cooperation."

Idealism may be at the heart of the projects which Panthera has undertaken, but Kaplan understands better than anyone the Realpolitik of conservation – the hard facts, the clinching arguments, the hidden interstices between money, power and land.

In Malaysia, he persuaded the government that they were not just conserving the tiger but, specifically, the Malayan tiger, a rare sub-species; he appealed to national pride, and did not just deal in wishy-washy slogans.

In Pakistan, he went one better, persuading then President Musharraf, not known as an animal-lover, to take a close interest in snow leopards: convening conferences and establishing leopard reserves. How did he do it? By quietly impressing on the Pakistani president how much kudos his country would get on the world stage from protecting its leopards, while India made such a hash of protecting its tigers.

Kaplan may be planning ahead, dreaming big dreams, making big plans, but he has not forgotten the lesson he learnt 20 years ago, when he was a history student at Oxford: it is the past of the planet that holds the key to the future of the planet.

"If you ask people to look too far into the future, they don't get it. You need to foster an understanding of the habitat destruction that has taken place in the past, and how we can avoid making the same mistakes. You need to explain and execute a strategy that shows people why wildlife is worth conserving."
For more information about the big-cats conservation charity Panthera, visit www.panthera.org

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/science/science-news/6005984/Tom-Kaplan-I-have-big-plans-for-big-cats.html