Showing newest 24 of 55 posts from April 2008. Show older posts
Showing newest 24 of 55 posts from April 2008. Show older posts

Tuesday, April 29, 2008

Shaquille

Tears dropped down onto his lifeless form from the eyes of those who
had gathered around Shaq to ease him over to the other side. His
black spotted fur, dappled by the afternoon sun, glistened but no
longer gave rise and fall to his sedated breathing. His 17 year
prison sentence ended today.

We were remembering the proud, fearless leopard and how he had touched
all of our lives with his strength to overcome the awful lot he had
been dealt. Shaq had been born in a cage. He was bred to be used in
a nightclub act by a trainer who made his living from the suffering of
many big cats. As long as people would pay to see big cats doing
stupid pet tricks he could count on a good living by providing the
disposable product of the trade; young, compliant felines.

Cubs live with their mothers for the first few years, so breeders pull
the cubs before their eyes open and bottle raise them to be completely
dependent and subservient to their human master. By the time the cats
are a year old, they are nearly full sized; appearing to be adults,
but still mentally kittens. The crowd is wowed by the mastery of the
trainer over what they think to be a full-grown and fully intact lion,
tiger or leopard. Usually they are declawed, defanged cubs who have
been beaten into submission repeatedly behind the scenes.

A well known tiger tamer boasted to me that the way you teach a big
cat "who is boss" is to chain them to a wall and beat them with a
whip, standing just out of reach. After a while the cat learns that
no matter how hard he tries, he cannot retaliate and after a while
gives up hope. His spirit dies and he is considered tamed or trained.
The training goes on behind locked doors because the public would
never support these wild animal acts if they knew the truth.

The trainers all claim that they only use "positive reinforcement" and
when in front of the public they do, but the cats are ever reminded of
the brutal force that will be used against them if they fail to
comply. Sometimes it is in the carrying of a whip, which the trainer
will defend as only being a guide, and sometimes it is in the verbal
threats using words that only the cats in the ring can hear. It can
be as subtle as a look (remember how your mom could do that?) or a
gesture that the cat associates with pain.

At Big Cat Rescue we use positive reinforcement or operant
conditioning as it is often called as a way to keep the cats' minds
stimulated and to assist us in their care and it works… when the cat
wants it to work. This sort of training involves rewarding the cat
with a little cube of meat for doing something we need them to do,
like come into their feeding area, or show us a paw, or lay down next
to the wall of the cage so we can give them their vaccinations or
treat minor injuries. We do it because taking care of 100+ cats goes
a lot easier if you have to get flea treatments on them and they come
when called. It isn't feasible to chase down a tiger just to put a
few drops of Advantage on him. The cats at Big Cat Rescue do it
because it is something fun to do and they are bored out of their
minds. The agonizing boredom of captivity is the hardest issue for
anyone to address when caring for animals who cannot be set free. We
never withhold food from their main meals, so the treats are merely
the cat's way of measuring if they got our request right.

It's helpful, but it isn't reliable. The cats only respond to this
kind of training on their own terms and for those who are being paid
to perform for the public there isn't the option of just turning to
the crowd and saying, "Sorry, the cat doesn't want to jump through the
hoop today."

In Shaquille's case, people paid to see him jump through the burning
hoop in the nightclub show and he was going to jump or die, and he
knew it. He knew what would happen if he didn't and one day, upon
reaching adulthood, he proudly decided he wasn't going to do it any
more. It was in the early days of the sanctuary when we would rescue a
cat but not require the owner give up their rights to own again. Our
policies evolved as we witnessed time and again that breeders,
trainers, photo booth operators and exotic pet owners would dump the
cats as they grew up in favor of new babies.

The first time I saw Shaquille and the cougar who came with him, I
thought that some horrible accident must have happened en route to us.
Calling the former owner we learned that the injuries they suffered
from had been the result of the beating they had taken at his hand for
not performing. He had no remorse and had broken no laws because
there are virtually none that protect the big cats. When we
complained to USDA we were told that beating big cats to make them
perform was considered "standard training methods."

The cougar had a fungal infection in her brain because it had been
exposed from the crashing blows to her head and wasn't long for this
world after that. Shaq's face was the consistency of ground hamburger
and his eye sockets had been crushed so that even years later, when he
had fully recovered, his eyes teared constantly. His involuntary
trail of tears were a solemn reminder of the abuse he had endured.
His story was told to thousands who visited him at the sanctuary, once
he was comfortable around people, and to millions who visited his page
on the Internet.

Shaquille's indomitable spirit has been an inspiration to so many. He
purr-sonified strength in adversity and the ability to forgive. As a
result many people around the globe made a connection with him that
bridged the gap perceived as "us" and "them." All of those thoughts
were passing through our minds as he breathed his last in our arms.

The silence of the moment was shattered by an unearthly howling across
the refuge. Hallelujah, a cougar and, the first big cat to come to
the sanctuary, made the same proclamation as has become his habit when
cats cross over. To my ears it was both chilling and comforting.
Hal's timing and the fact that he never otherwise makes such a call
let us know that we really are all connected. We feel each other and
that connection transcends our physical bodies.

It is sad for us to lose the physical connection with another that we
best understand, but Hallelujah reminded us that Shaquille and all
those who have gone on before him are ever in our midst.

Leopards are designed to run 40 mph and leap 20 feet. They are strong
swimmers and climbers and in my opinion are the smartest of all cat
species. No cage is sufficient for their needs. Shaq was born in a
cage, lived 17 years in a cage, and died in a cage…but now he is free.
His work is done. He brought to light the dark side of the
entertainment industry and he put the torch in your hands to continue
exposing animal abuse until it ends. You are his voice.

Shaquille's page: http://bigcatrescue.org/cats/captive/leopardsshaquille.htm

Species spotlight video on leopards:

http://www.bigcatrescue.org/video/00113.htm

This video shows our vet doing Operant Conditioning with the cats:

http://www.bigcatrescue.org/video/00071.htm

--
For the cats,

Carole Baskin, CEO of Big Cat Rescue
an Educational Sanctuary home
to more than 100 big cats
12802 Easy Street Tampa, FL 33625
813.493.4564 fax 885.4457

http://www.BigCatRescue.org MakeADifference@BigCatRescue.org

Sign our petition to protect tigers from being farmed here:

http://capwiz.com/bigcatrescue/issues/alert/?alertid=9952801&type=CU

This message contains information from Big Cat Rescue that may be
confidential or privileged. The information contained herein is intended
only for the eyes of the individual or entity named above. You are hereby
notified that any dissemination, distribution, disclosure, and/or copying of
the information contained in this communication is strictly prohibited. The
recipient should check this e-mail and any attachments for the presence of
viruses. Big Cat Rescue accepts no liability for any damage or loss caused
by any virus transmitted by this e-mail.

Monday, April 28, 2008

Big Cat Rescue in Encyclopedia Britannica

Encyclopedia Britannica: In April Big Cat Rescue was the featured
story at Encyclopedia Britannica. Anita Wolff had contacted Jamie
Veronica to ask for permission to use some of her photos and she
suggested they contact Carole Baskin about some of the legislative
work we are doing. Encyclopedia Britannica devotes an impressive
section of their site as a source of information, a call for action,
and a stimulus to thought regarding humanity's relationship with the
animals with whom we share our planet. They support worldwide efforts
to ensure humane treatment of animals, develop the understanding of
their nature, promote their survival, and protect and restore the
environment. We are honored to be a part of the great work they are
doing to educate, inform and enlighten. Read it here:

http://advocacy.britannica.com/blog/advocacy/2008/04/big-cat-rescue/

--
For the cats,

Carole Baskin, CEO of Big Cat Rescue
an Educational Sanctuary home
to more than 100 big cats
12802 Easy Street Tampa, FL 33625
813.493.4564 fax 885.4457

http://www.BigCatRescue.org MakeADifference@BigCatRescue.org

Sign our petition to protect tigers from being farmed here:

http://capwiz.com/bigcatrescue/issues/alert/?alertid=9952801&type=CU

This message contains information from Big Cat Rescue that may be
confidential or privileged. The information contained herein is intended
only for the eyes of the individual or entity named above. You are hereby
notified that any dissemination, distribution, disclosure, and/or copying of
the information contained in this communication is strictly prohibited. The
recipient should check this e-mail and any attachments for the presence of
viruses. Big Cat Rescue accepts no liability for any damage or loss caused
by any virus transmitted by this e-mail.

Saturday, April 26, 2008

The HSUS Applauds Introduction of Lautenberg Bill to Stop Trophy Shooting of Captive Animals

U.S. Senator Frank Lautenberg, D-N.J., today introduced the Sportsmanship in Hunting Act of 2008, which would crack down on the inhumane and unsportsmanlike practice of shooting tame, exotic animals trapped behind fences. The bill would prohibit the interstate commerce in exotic (non-native) mammals for the purpose of killing them for trophies or entertainment in fenced areas smaller than 1,000 acres.

"Shooting a tame animal trapped behind a fence is like shooting fish in a barrel," said Michael Markarian, executive vice president for The Humane Society of The United States. "Animal advocates, hunters, and wildlife managers agree that these captive shoots are cruel, unsporting, and biologically reckless. We are grateful to Senator Lautenberg for working to put the lid on canned hunts."

Captive shoots, which are also known as canned hunts, are held at private trophy hunting facilities where hunters pay to kill tame, captive, exotic animals — even endangered species — as guaranteed trophies, since the animals have no chance of escape. Animals on captive shooting facilities often come from private breeders, animal dealers and even zoos and circuses. Frequently, the animals have been hand-raised and bottle-fed, so they have lost their fear of people. Many hunting groups are critical of captive shoots because sportsmanship and fair chase are absent, and because transporting these animals across state lines can spread diseases to native wildlife populations.

"There is nothing sportsmanlike or skillful about shooting an animal that cannot escape. The idea of a defenseless animal meeting a violent end as the target of a canned hunt is, at the very least, distasteful to many Americans," said Sen. Lautenberg. "Canned hunting is a form of brutality that has no place in our society."

Senator Lautenberg has led the fight to stop canned hunts in previous sessions of Congress. A House version of the bill, H.R. 3829, was introduced in October by U.S. Reps. Steve Cohen, D-Tenn, and Ed Whitfield, R-Ky.

Facts

  • Captive shoots are illegal or restricted in 23 states. The HSUS tracks individual state statutes and regulations, which are viewable at humanesociety.org/cannedhuntsmap.
  • Although advertised under a variety of names — most frequently "game ranches" or "shooting preserves" — captive shoots violate the hunting community's standard of "fair chase" by confining animals to cages or fenced enclosures.
  • The animals in captive shooting facilities are bred in captivity, purchased from animal dealers, or, in some cases, retired from roadside zoos and circuses, so they do not fear contact with humans and make easy targets.
http://www.hsus.org/press_and_publications/press_releases/
lautenberg_introduces_bill_to_ban_captive_animal_
shooting_042408.html

photos with tigers this week end

Do we have anyone who could get photos and video of a tiger photo
booth display at Flea World in Sanford, FL today or tomorrow?

There is a TV ad running advertising that you can have your picture
made with a tiger and the video shows tigers that are well over the 45
lb limit in FL being handled by the public. They have advertised that
it will be available at 2PM and 4PM.

USDA and Fish and Game have been notified, but they almost never do
anything about it, so getting photos and videos of these people
breaking the law, if they are, and making a fuss about it in the
media may be the only way to stop the abuse.

Here is the contact info for the Flea Market:

Flea World
www.fleaworld.com

4311 S Orlando Dr
Sanford, FL 32773
(407) 330-1792


Google map link below:

http://maps.google.com/maps?ie=UTF8&oe=utf-8&client=firefox-a&dq=flea+world+loc:+Sanford,+FL&daddr=4311+S+Orlando+Dr,+Sanford,+FL+32773&geocode=9206171481579172095,28.743693,-81.297110&f=d&ll=28.743693,-81.29711&spn=0.005926,0.007607&z=17
--
For the cats,

Carole Baskin, CEO of Big Cat Rescue
an Educational Sanctuary home
to more than 100 big cats
12802 Easy Street Tampa, FL 33625
813.493.4564 fax 885.4457

http://www.BigCatRescue.org MakeADifference@BigCatRescue.org

Sign our petition to protect tigers from being farmed here:

http://capwiz.com/bigcatrescue/issues/alert/?alertid=9952801&type=CU

This message contains information from Big Cat Rescue that may be
confidential or privileged. The information contained herein is intended
only for the eyes of the individual or entity named above. You are hereby
notified that any dissemination, distribution, disclosure, and/or copying of
the information contained in this communication is strictly prohibited. The
recipient should check this e-mail and any attachments for the presence of
viruses. Big Cat Rescue accepts no liability for any damage or loss caused
by any virus transmitted by this e-mail.

17 Bobcats Seized

Wolves, bobcats, dogs, cats rescued from Idaho property

03:23 PM PDT on Wednesday, April 23, 2008

KTVB.COM

BOISE, Idaho - Police and animal agencies are on the scene of a
property near Melba after a case of animal hoarding was discovered
in Owyhee County.

Daren Martinez/KTVB

One of 15 wolves rescued from a property in Owyhee County Wednesday.


Nineteen wolves, seventeen bobcats, more than 60 house cats and
numerous dogs were living in deplorable conditions on property owned
by Sandy Knox.

Police say a wolf escaped from the woman's property last November
touching off a search effort the escaped animal.

Now authorities have made a deal with Knox to remove most of the
animals all but two wolves and two bobcats are being taken to a
temporary shelter. Authorities have been working for quite some time
to bring closure to the case.

The Idaho Humane Society, Idaho Department of Fish and Game, Owyhee
County Sheriff, the Department of Agriculture and the Winchester,
Idaho Wolf Center are helping with the case.

The wolves were being kept in cages on the property, which can be
detrimental both mentally and physically since the animals
naturally roam free. They were underfed as the woman was only able
to throw scraps from a distance.

Authorities hoped to have all the animals removed by the end of the
day. They were being evaluated at a clinic set up at the Murphy-
Reynolds-Wilson Fire District building. The wolves will be
transported to the Winchester Wolf Center in North Idaho and to a
sanctuary in Florida.

Owyhee County Sheriff Gary Aman said the woman has owned the animals
for about 14 years but can no longer care for them because of
declining health. Under a deal worked out by authorities, the woman
will not face charges.

The bobcats will be transported to the Idaho Humane Society facility
in Boise.

Dogs, domestic cats and a goose will also be held by the Idaho Humane
Society for evaluation and treatment before being placed for
adoption.

http://www.king5.com/animals/news/stories/NW_042308IDB_animals_rescued_SW.9264d1aa.html

http://www.ktvb.com/news/localnews/stories/ktvbn-apr2308-animals.91e18dd3.html


--
For the cats,

Carole Baskin, CEO of Big Cat Rescue
an Educational Sanctuary home
to more than 100 big cats
12802 Easy Street Tampa, FL 33625
813.493.4564 fax 885.4457

http://www.BigCatRescue.org MakeADifference@BigCatRescue.org

Sign our petition to protect tigers from being farmed here:

http://capwiz.com/bigcatrescue/issues/alert/?alertid=9952801&type=CU

This message contains information from Big Cat Rescue that may be
confidential or privileged. The information contained herein is intended
only for the eyes of the individual or entity named above. You are hereby
notified that any dissemination, distribution, disclosure, and/or copying of
the information contained in this communication is strictly prohibited. The
recipient should check this e-mail and any attachments for the presence of
viruses. Big Cat Rescue accepts no liability for any damage or loss caused
by any virus transmitted by this e-mail.

Big Cat Rescue in Houston Chronicle

Digging hidden treasures

April 25, 2008, 1:48PM
FLORIDA


By KRISTIN FINAN

TAMPA, Fla. — In theory, the Gasparilla Pirate Festival is a nod to
José Gaspar, a Spanish naval officer turned pirate who, according to
legend, roamed the west Florida coast in the late 18th and early 19th
centuries and nicknamed himself "the last of the buccaneers."

But as I witnessed earlier this year, it's actually a huge,
pirate-themed party with a parade, fireworks, beads, beer and ample
misuse of the word "booty."

And in essence, the festival — held each January — illustrates a
grander point about this area: Despite being known for major
professional sports teams such as the Buccaneers and attractions such
as Busch Gardens, the Tampa Bay area is a surprisingly good place for
a fun-filled — and affordable — weekend escape. It was my first choice
for a new Travel section series on cheap trips.

If you avoid the beaten path, you'll be rewarded with extraordinary
sights such as mermaids in nearby Weeki Wachee Springs, exotic tigers
at Big Cat Rescue and the surreal fantasy world that is the Salvador
Dalí Museum — all for a fraction of what you'd spend at the large
amusement parks that Florida is famous for.

"It's very difficult to compete against the big boys, and by no means
will we ever attempt to do so," said John Athanason, spokesman for
Weeki Wachee Springs, which features "live" mermaid exhibitions,
riverboat cruises and educational animal shows. "But our park is a
little piece of Florida history, and that's something worth seeing.
It's natural. It's beautiful. It's Florida, the way it was meant to be
seen."

A big fan of Dalí, I make a point to seek out his artwork whenever I
travel. When I dropped by the Salvador Dalí Museum in St. Petersburg
during my first visit to the Tampa Bay area last year, I was thrilled
by the mix of his famous works — like Gala Contemplating the
Mediterranean Sea Which at Twenty Meters Becomes A Portrait of Abraham
Lincoln — and his lesser-known pieces.

Anthony Rainier, a Houston native who now lives in Tampa, says one of
the area's main charms is the diversity it offers — and attracts.

"There's all sorts of people with different backgrounds here," Rainier
said. "It's a big melting pot."

In part, that melting pot can be attributed to cigarmaker Vicente
Martinez-Ybor, who moved his factory from Key West to Tampa in the
1880s and helped establish the city as the cigar capital of the world.
As Cuban, Spanish and Italian immigrants flocked to the area of Tampa
now called Ybor City for work, an interesting blending of cultures
occurred, said Chantal Hevia, acting director of the Ybor City Museum
Society.

"All the cigar workers congregated from all these different cultures
and their cultures amalgamated," Hevia said. "They picked up different
aspects of their food and their language."

During our stroll through Ybor City, which is officially a National
Historic Landmark District within Tampa, we saw hand-rolled cigar
shops bordering trendy restaurants, sports bars and live music venues.
Just outside the Tampa Bay Brewing Company, where we enjoyed delicious
pizza and beers brewed on-site, streetcars modeled after those used in
the late 1800s and early 1900s cruised by.

"Side by side you have culture and entertainment," Hevia said. "You
come here and you get history, you get art, and then you have some
wonderful restaurants, many that feature Cuban and Italian foods that
were prevalent when the town was first founded."

Back on the beaten path, if you want a sports-centered weekend, you
can time your visit for a pro baseball, football or hockey game. And
those big attractions — such as Busch Gardens, the Florida Aquarium
and even Orlando's Disney World, located about 85 miles away — are
always fun choices.

Oh, and if you don't happen to make it to town during Gasparilla,
don't fret — there are a wealth of swashbucklers, scoundrels and
scallywags available to show you Tampa's pirate side year-round.

At Gaspar's Grotto, a pirate-themed bar in Ybor City that claims to
celebrate Gasparilla every day with rum tastings, pirate merchandise
and free beads for all ladies, the motto is "loud music, indecent
dancing, riotous laughter and raucous good times."

Shiver me timbers!

Are you ready, matey?

kristin.finan@chron.com

http://www.chron.com/disp/story.mpl/travel/5730899.html

--
For the cats,

Carole Baskin, CEO of Big Cat Rescue
an Educational Sanctuary home
to more than 100 big cats
12802 Easy Street Tampa, FL 33625
813.493.4564 fax 885.4457

http://www.BigCatRescue.org MakeADifference@BigCatRescue.org

Sign our petition to protect tigers from being farmed here:

http://capwiz.com/bigcatrescue/issues/alert/?alertid=9952801&type=CU

This message contains information from Big Cat Rescue that may be
confidential or privileged. The information contained herein is intended
only for the eyes of the individual or entity named above. You are hereby
notified that any dissemination, distribution, disclosure, and/or copying of
the information contained in this communication is strictly prohibited. The
recipient should check this e-mail and any attachments for the presence of
viruses. Big Cat Rescue accepts no liability for any damage or loss caused
by any virus transmitted by this e-mail.

Friday, April 25, 2008

Save the Tiger

Save the Tiger

MEP Gill calls for greater EU-Coordinated action
21 April 2008 - Issue : 778

The European Parliament has called for a new strategy to prevent the tiger from becoming extinct. MEP Neena Gill, President of the European Parliament's India Delegation, held a special "Tiger Day" in the European Parliament on April 16, where she called for greater EU-coordinated action to prevent the tiger from becoming extinct.

Combining a lively meetings and events to raise awareness of the depleting numbers of tigers across Asia, and to discuss EU support to tackle the issue, Gill was joined by Valmik Thapar and Grace de Gabriel, two of the world's leading tiger experts, who flew in from India and China respectively to address the European Parliament, sharing their concern about the tiger's future.

Gill told her audience, "Losing the tiger would be a global tragedy. Therefore, I am calling on the European Union to develop a comprehensive strategy to tackle this issue. This would include at the very least the following five steps:

-Provide technical assistance to tiger states in enforcing and analysing criminal networks
-Provide financial assistance to aid in the protection of wild tigers
-Urge India and China at the highest political level to continue to take action in tackling organised "tiger trafficking mafias," and to increase enforcement of laws
- Call on all countries involved, and especially India, China and Nepal, to cooperate on tackling this issue through collaborative strategies to combat cross border trafficking
- Raise awareness and education worldwide on the immediate threat facing tigers, in order to change attitudes towards consumption and decrease demand in China and other consuming nations."

According to The Wildlife Protection Society of India (WPSI) (http://www.wpsi-india- .org/wpsi/index.php), India holds over half the world's tiger population. Citing the latest tiger census report released on February 12, 2008 by the National Tiger Conservation Authority, the WPSI stated on its website, "Current tiger population stands at 1,411 (i.e. ranging between a minimum of 1,165 to a maximum of 1,657)."

Moreover, recent undercover investigations by the WPSI and the Environmental Investigation Agency (EIA) revealed that the trade in tiger and leopard body parts in China continues to thrive, operating without any hindrance from the Chinese government whilst driving India's wild tigers closer towards extinction.

"With the run-up to the Beijing Olympics, the world's attention is on China. We must raise this issue with the authorities and ensure they do not lift the ban on trade in tiger products which would prove disastrous to global efforts to save the tiger," commented Gill.

"Tigers are one of the world's most adored animals. We must act now before it is too late. We owe it to future generations to give them the opportunity to marvel at them as we have done. "Although the European Union is not a major consumer of tiger parts or products, it can still play an important role in the fight to save these wonderful animals. By increasing financial and technical assistance to those working in tiger conservation, encouraging high level political dialogue between tiger states, and by operating more effectively through existing international bodies, it can make a huge contribution. The tiger is a global icon, and I want Tiger Day to be the kick start that allows it to endure as one," added Gill.

Some reports put the number of tigers in India around 50,000 a century ago while the country is said to be home to 40 percent of the world's tigers, with 23 tiger reserves in 17 states.


http://www.neurope.eu/articles/85501.php
 



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Tamil Nadu at the forefront of tiger conservation

Tamil Nadu at the forefront of tiger conservation

April 22, 2008

TThe Tiger is vanishing from our jungles. That is the story in the rest of the country. But in Tamil Nadu, it is said to be increasing according to a recent report. There are three Tiger reserves in Tamil Nadu, two of which have been notified only recently.
But how have they have increased in this state? The concerned official says 'by leaving them alone'.

We went to visit the Kallakad-Mundanthurai Tiger sanctuary in the Western Ghats. It shares a long border with Kerala and what is special about this sanctuary is that as many as 14 rivers originate from its area. Thus there is no water shortage throughout the year.

C Bhadrasamy has been in the forest department for 27 long years. He is the Deputy Director of this sanctuary. "There are no positive steps that you can take to make Tigers breed, but you can create an environment of least disturbance for them," he said.

He goes on to say, "By nature, Tamil Nadu is a law-abiding state. So it is easier to protect the Tiger here. Do you know that the RPF is the second largest armed force in the country after the Army? They still cannot maintain discipline and safety in the North. But we with a very small team can protect the Tiger here. The reason is the self -discipline of the people of this state."

"Protection is total and complete here. Though we do have a lot of practical difficulties, we have ensured that the Tiger has an undisturbed habitat for breeding. Another advantage we have over other states is that we do not have a problem with extremists. They usually hide in the forests. And as they use arms, their presence is highly disturbing to the animal kingdom," he says.

Text : A Ganesh Nadars Photograph : Devendra M Singh/AFP/Getty Images

Also read: It's a shame we can't protect our national animal

http://specials.rediff.com/news/2008/apr/21slide1.htm


April 22, 2008

TThe Tiger is vanishing from our jungles. That is the story in the rest of the country. But in Tamil Nadu, it is said to be increasing according to a recent report. There are three Tiger reserves in Tamil Nadu, two of which have been notified only recently.
But how have they have increased in this state? The concerned official says 'by leaving them alone'.

We went to visit the Kallakad-Mundanthurai Tiger sanctuary in the Western Ghats. It shares a long border with Kerala and what is special about this sanctuary is that as many as 14 rivers originate from its area. Thus there is no water shortage throughout the year.

C Bhadrasamy has been in the forest department for 27 long years. He is the Deputy Director of this sanctuary. "There are no positive steps that you can take to make Tigers breed, but you can create an environment of least disturbance for them," he said.

He goes on to say, "By nature, Tamil Nadu is a law-abiding state. So it is easier to protect the Tiger here. Do you know that the RPF is the second largest armed force in the country after the Army? They still cannot maintain discipline and safety in the North. But we with a very small team can protect the Tiger here. The reason is the self -discipline of the people of this state."

"Protection is total and complete here. Though we do have a lot of practical difficulties, we have ensured that the Tiger has an undisturbed habitat for breeding. Another advantage we have over other states is that we do not have a problem with extremists. They usually hide in the forests. And as they use arms, their presence is highly disturbing to the animal kingdom," he says.

Text : A Ganesh Nadars Photograph : Devendra M Singh/AFP/Getty Images

Also read: It's a shame we can't protect our national animal

http://specials.rediff.com/news/2008/apr/21slide1.htm



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Experts demand new tiger reserve

Experts demand new tiger reserve

Statesman News Service

BHUBANESWAR, April 21: Immediate notification of the Satkosia-Baisipalli forest area as Tiger Reserve, submission of proposal by the government for the Sunabeda sanctuary to be covered under Project Tiger and marking of tiger habitats to ensure that such areas are isolated from forest diversion proposals were some of the points made by wildlife experts at a recently held symposium here.

The symposium organised by Wild Orissa, a society for conservation of nature and wildlife also urged upon the state government to notify the forests of 'Narayanpatna', Gupteswar, 'Gandhamardhan', 'Kapilash', 'Malayagiri' and 'Chandrapur' as sanctuaries.

Taking note of the fact that the 'State Wildlife Board' has been defunct since long, the participants wanted the government to expeditiously constitute the Board and convene a meeting to discuss on these issues.

Justifying the demand for Sunabeda sanctuary to be a second project tiger zone, the Wild Orissa activists noted that it harbours the second highest number of tigers after Simlipal.

This patch of forests is contiguous with the Udanti-Sitanadi sanctuaries in Chhatisgarh through the Khariar forests, and with Udanti-Sitanadi having been cleared for inclusion under the Project Tiger scheme by the steering committee, there is an urgent need for placing the Sunabeda forests under the Project Tiger scheme, they noted.

These contiguous patch are potential rich habitats for Hard Footed Barasingha and Wild Buffalo.

With regards to Similipal Tiger Reserve, the symposium suggested that there was urgent need for improved co-ordination between various government agencies. Relocation of remaining villages in the core area should be completed within a time frame along with livelihood programmes for relocated families to minimise on limiting factors of Tiger Reserve.

Deliberating on the perennial staff shortage problem, the symposium suggested strengthening of field staff and introduction of a system of rewards and recognition in the line of 'President's Medal', 'Governor's Medal' and 'Forest Medal' (like Police Medal) for those posted in remote tiger reserve areas. There are a large number of vacancies among the field staff in the forest department and the average age of staff at present is quite high, which impedes their efficiency in difficult and inhospitable terrain, observed participants.

All the field officers in tiger habitats should be given immunity of using firearms for wildlife protection. A dedicated well trained 'Forest Protection Force' need to be created immediately. Magisterial powers to Wildlife Wardens and ACF's should also be given for the protected areas. All arms license within 10 Kms of protected areas should be cancelled, suggested the panel. The Wild Orissa also pleaded for establishment of a forensic laboratory' in Orissa for wildlife crimes.

http://www.thestatesman.net/page.news.php?clid=9&theme=&usrsess=1&id=200556
 



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Euro MPs urged to save tigers

Euro MPs urged to save tigers
 
Page last updated at 10:45 GMT, Wednesday, 16 April 2008 11:45 UK
 
MEPs are being urged to use their influence to force nations with wild tiger populations to halt poaching and the illegal trade in tiger parts.
 
The European Parliament's first Tiger Day is being held to focus attention on the plight of the endangered animals.
 
Scientists estimate that only 2,500 breeding adults are left in the wild.
 
However, campaigners say tiger numbers could reach 10,000 within a decade if attempts to protect the animals receive additional support and resources.
 
'Tiger farms'
There are growing fears among campaign groups that some nations, such as China, could soon legalise the trade in farmed tiger parts.
 
"A few Chinese businessmen who invest in industrialised tiger farming are petitioning the government to lift a 15-year trade ban that has successfully reduced the market for tiger parts used in traditional Chinese medicine," said Grace Ge Gabriel from the International Fund for Animal Welfare (Ifaw).
 
"Overturning the trade ban would open the floodgates of consumption, and stimulate more poaching of wild tigers."
 
Dirk Sterckx, a Belgian MEP and chairman of the Parliament's Delegation to China, said it was "absolutely essential" for China to support the international efforts to save wild tigers.
"I would urge the Chinese authorities to fulfill their international obligations by declaring their commitment to the 1993 ban on the trade in tiger parts," he commented, "and by destroying existing stockpiles of tiger parts."
 
Alasdair Cameron, from the London-based Environmental Investigation Agency (EIA), called for the phasing out of China's tiger farms.
 
"It is essential that all parties, including the European Parliament, do all that they can to prevent the extinction of the wild tiger and other Asian big cats," he said.
 
During the course of Brussels Tiger Day, which is being hosted by UK MEP Neena Gill, politicians are being invted to a range of events, including a meeting with a number of the world's leading experts on tigers.
 
SEE ALSO
End of the tiger tale?
13 Jun 07 Science/Nature
Tiger numbers 'halve in 25 years'
12 Mar 08 Science/Nature
Vietnam zoo auctioned dead tigers
10 Jan 08 Asia-Pacific
 



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'Act now' to save India's tigers

'Act now' to save India's tigers

The European Parliament has called for a new strategy to prevent the tiger from becoming extinct.

The organisation's India delegation is holding a "Tiger Day" at the European Parliament in Brussels.

Indian government figures show the country's tiger population has fallen hugely in the past five years with only 1,411 tigers left in the wild.

Wildlife activists blame poaching and urbanisation for the decline and say the authorities must do more.

'Trafficking mafia'

"Recent figures show... by 2025 the tiger may be extinct," Neena Gill, president of the European Parliament's India delegation, said.

"India alone cannot tackle this looming extinction. It is time for the European Union to take a stronger role in the international drive to save the tiger," she said.

Ms Gill's office said that one of the chief causes of the declining numbers of tigers is the presence of "tiger trafficking mafias" in Asia who are poaching Indian tigers, trafficking skins and body parts across Nepal and the Himalayan region to China.

China is a big marker for tiger skins and bones which are sold at a profit of 900%.


Tiger skins and other body parts sell for thousands of dollars


It says that China is under pressure from its tiger "farmers" to lift its existing ban on the trade in tiger parts and legalise it.

But conservationists say such a move would devastate the wild tiger population by causing an upturn in demand for tiger products and increasing poaching in the wild.

"With the run up to the Beijing Olympics, the world's attention is on China. We must raise this issue with the authorities and ensure they do not lift the ban on trade in tiger products which would prove disastrous to global efforts to save the tiger," says Ms Gill.

"Losing the tiger would be a global tragedy. Therefore, I am calling on the European Union to develop a comprehensive strategy to tackle this issue."

Poachers

Meanwhile, police in the northern Uttar Pradesh state say they have seized 20 skins of tigers and leopards.

The recovery was made in Pratapgarh district, 200km (124 miles) east of the state capital Lucknow.

Police have also arrested two people who, they said, were trying to smuggle out the skins to Nepal.

According to the latest Indian government figures released in February, the number of tigers in the wild has fallen to 1,411 - down from 3,642 in the last major survey in 2002.

Last year, federal authorities announced the creation of a special force to protect tigers. But it is unclear whether this strategy has worked.

Experts blame the government for failing to crack down on poachers and the illegal trade in tiger skins.

Tigers are poached for their body parts - skins are prized for fashion and tiger bones are used for oriental medicines.

Tiger pelts can fetch up to $12,500 in China.

According to reports, there were 40,000 tigers in India a century ago.

The country is home to 40% of the world's tigers, with 23 tiger reserves in 17 states.

SEE ALSO
India tiger population declines 13 Feb 08 South Asia
Indian tiger skins 'sold abroad' 22 Sep 05 South Asia
India to probe wildlife poacher 01 Jul 05 South Asia
Indian agency to protect tigers 25 Jun 05 South Asia
The threat to India's main tiger centre 05 May 05 South Asia
India investigates tiger decline 29 Apr 05 South Asia

RELATED INTERNET LINKS
European Parliament
Wildlife Protection Society Of India
Wildlife Institute of India


http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/south_asia/7350118.stm
 



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Tiger skins worth millions seized in UP

Tiger skins worth millions seized in UP

April 16th, 2008 - 2:53 pm ICT by admin

Pratapgarh (UP), Apr 16 (ANI): Forest and wildlife authorities have seized over a dozen tiger skins in Uttar Pradesh's Pratapgarh District.

Two men were nabbed from Sultanpur in Pratapgarh District by the police, who acted on a tip off.

The seized tiger skins are being valued at 20.5 million rupees in the international market. The catch included two tiger skins, 12 cheetah skins and a leopard skin.

Police said some security force personnel were involvedm, which made the crime more serious.

R.K. Srivastav, Superintendent of Police, Pratapgarh, said: "The accused were to sell these skins in the market, as they needed the money. It was their greed for easy money, which got them into the business of selling animal skins."

One of the accused Sanjay admitted that he had stocked the tiger skins.

India's conviction rate of poachers is reportedly less than five percent. Most poachers are let scot-free due to lack of evidence.

The number of tigers in India has plummeted to around 1,411, nearly half the previous estimate, as humans either kill them for their body parts or encroach into their habitat, according to a Government survey.

The estimate comes from the latest tiger census by the Government-run National Tiger Conservation Authority, and is based on a more complex counting method.

The previous census, carried out in 2001 and 2002, said there were 3,642 tigers. A century ago there were 40,000. (ANI)

http://www.thaindian.com/newsportal/india-news/tiger-skins-worth-millions-seized-in-up_10038497.html
 



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Circus tigers evicted after city finds them in small cage

Circus tigers evicted after city finds them in small cage

The Associated Press
Article Launched: 04/18/2008 09:31:56 AM PDT


LOS ANGELES—Five Circus Vazquez tigers have been evicted by Los Angeles animal welfare officials because the big-cats earlier attacked and killed another tiger in their small cage.
The city Department of Animal Services pulled the Circus Vazquez conditional use permit Thursday and ordered removal of the tigers.

Department general manager Ed Boks says the tigers killed one of their own in Huntington Park on March 31 and the U.S. Department of Agriculture cited Circus Vazquez for having too many tigers in close proximity to each other.

Los Angeles officials went to the San Fernando Valley where the circus was performing across from the Panorama City Mall and the tigers were close together in the same cage. Boks says it was believed to be a public danger.

Last week, the city ordered a Circus Vazquez elephant keeper to leave town with his three elephants for having recently violated federal animal welfare laws.

http://www.mercurynews.com/news/ci_8972839
 



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Bay Area pair admit illegal import of stuffed tiger

Bay Area pair admit illegal import of stuffed tiger

The Associated Press
Article Launched: 04/18/2008 05:47:22 PM PDT


SAN FRANCISCO—A Bay Area pair couple admitted in federal court to trying to illegally import a real, stuffed tiger into the United States.
The pair pleaded guilty to one charge each of trying to import an endangered species without proper permits in exchange for prosecutors dropping more serious smuggling charges.

Nicki Phung, 31, and Steven Tieu, 38, are both expected to be sentenced to probation. Each have agreed to pay $5,000 to a nonprofit dedicated to protecting wild cats. Their plea deals were announced Friday.

The two were caught in December when a U.S. Customs official at San Francisco International Airport inspected a box labeled "toy tiger" mailed from Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam and bound for the couple's home in Hercules, Calif.

Phung's attorney Geoffrey Rotwein said the mounted tiger was meant as a gift and that the couple never intended to sell it.

"They feel really bad about what they did," Rotwein said. He said the couple don't know who the gift giver was and didn't know until "late in the game" that they were to receive a stuffed tiger.

"They kind of got duped into this," Rotwein said. "They didn't really what they were getting into."

http://www.mercurynews.com/breakingnews/ci_8976036
 



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Thursday, April 24, 2008

Video of Chance the Bobcat Being Released

Video of Chance the Bobcat Being Released

http://www.youtube.com/user/BigCatRescue

--
For the cats,

Carole Baskin, CEO of Big Cat Rescue
an Educational Sanctuary home
to more than 100 big cats
12802 Easy Street Tampa, FL 33625
813.493.4564 fax 885.4457

http://www.BigCatRescue.org MakeADifference@BigCatRescue.org

Sign our petition to protect tigers from being farmed here:

http://capwiz.com/bigcatrescue/issues/alert/?alertid=9952801&type=CU

This message contains information from Big Cat Rescue that may be
confidential or privileged. The information contained herein is intended
only for the eyes of the individual or entity named above. You are hereby
notified that any dissemination, distribution, disclosure, and/or copying of
the information contained in this communication is strictly prohibited. The
recipient should check this e-mail and any attachments for the presence of
viruses. Big Cat Rescue accepts no liability for any damage or loss caused
by any virus transmitted by this e-mail.

Sunday, April 20, 2008

arth Day Event Goes Back To Nature w/ Big Cat Rescue

By LENORA LAKE, Tribune correspondent

Published: April 19, 2008

THONOTOSASSA - Spending time with nature was important to Dorsey Yawn
as a child, so he seized the opportunity Saturday to give his
grandchildren and their friends a first-hand experience with the
outdoors.

They attended the Woods, Water and Wildlife event at Nature's
Classroom, Hillsborough County school district's environmental
education center. The two-day event, in conjunction with Earth Day,
concludes today.

"I grew up with an outdoor lifestyle; I had a father who taught me to
fish and hunt," Yawn said. "There is so much of nature disappearing
today that I wanted them to see it."

His grandson's friend, Jake Lehrer, 9, got to hold a year-old, 18-inch
alligator. The reptile's tail slapped the arm of his Chiles Elementary
School classmate, Bradley Canerday, who is Yawn's grandson.

"He was kind of smooth but he kept squirming around," Lehrer said.

The first-time festival includes animal encounters, arts and crafts,
live folk and bluegrass music, a nature art show by well-known
photographers and artists, a student art exhibit and displays by local
organizations including Tampa Audubon Society, Big Cat Rescue,
Southwest Florida Water Management District and Tampa Bay Orchid
Society.

A 30-minute boat ride on the Hillsborough River gave visitors close-up
views of alligators, snakes, turtles and birds, including roseate
spoonbills and little blue herons.

Karen Folsom, administrator of Nature's Classroom's, said all
Hillsborough County public school sixth-graders visit the center for
three days during the school year. That visit leaves a legacy, she
said.

"We are often asked if we can have families out here. We felt it was
time to open the doors to the public," Folsom said, adding that two
artists assisted in planning the event.

Volunteers from Boy Scouts, Young Life, Armwood High School National
Honor Society and Families Instructing Students at Home assisted with
craft activities, parking and by answering questions about a bear,
raccoon, fox, fox squirrel, alligator and other animals on display.

Some volunteers, like Armwood student Nick Briggs, 17, took a more
hands-on approach – holding a 6-foot-long yellow rat snake for
children to touch.

"I came here in sixth grade. It was really fun and I thought this was
a good chance to come here again and to hang out with the kids,"
Briggs said.

Temple Terrace residents Alyssan Chevaillier, 7, and her sister,
Ashley, 3, liked a smaller red rat snake they could hold in their
laps,

"It was kind of weird because it was really squishy and was soft on
the side," said Alyssan, a student at Lewis Elementary said.

Folsom said she was pleased with the first day's attendance of about
1,000 visitors, comments from the guests and the volunteers'
enthusiasm.

"Next year is our 40th anniversary, so this was a test," Folsom said.

If You Go

WHAT: Woods, Water and Wildlife: An Earth Day Celebration and Nature
Art Show with animal encounters, children's activities, boat rides,
music, food vendors

WHEN: 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. today

WHERE: Nature's Classroom, 13100 Verges Road, Thonotosassa

DONATION: $4 per car

INFORMATION: (813) 987-6969

Correspondent Lenora Lake can be reached at (813) 865-4851 or
llake@tampatrib.com.

http://www2.tbo.com/content/2008/apr/19/earth-day-event-goes-back-nature/

--
For the cats,

Carole Baskin, CEO of Big Cat Rescue
an Educational Sanctuary home
to more than 100 big cats
12802 Easy Street Tampa, FL 33625
813.493.4564 fax 885.4457

http://www.BigCatRescue.org MakeADifference@BigCatRescue.org

Sign our petition to protect tigers from being farmed here:

http://capwiz.com/bigcatrescue/issues/alert/?alertid=9952801&type=CU

This message contains information from Big Cat Rescue that may be
confidential or privileged. The information contained herein is intended
only for the eyes of the individual or entity named above. You are hereby
notified that any dissemination, distribution, disclosure, and/or copying of
the information contained in this communication is strictly prohibited. The
recipient should check this e-mail and any attachments for the presence of
viruses. Big Cat Rescue accepts no liability for any damage or loss caused
by any virus transmitted by this e-mail.

Friday, April 18, 2008

Captive Tigers Harbor Rare "Purebred" Genes

Nearly half of tested captive tigers are "purebred" members of an endangered subspecies, raising the possibility they could bolster conservation efforts, a new genetic analysis suggests.

Similar screening of some of the thousands of tigers with unknown heritage held on farms and by private owners would considerably increase the number of animals useful for captive breeding programs, the scientists say.

The news comes at a dire time for wild tigers. As few as 3,000 individuals remain where more than 100,000 roamed just a century ago. Three of the eight subspecies have become extinct, and a fourth, the South China tiger, persists only in zoos.

(Related: "India's Tigers Number Half as Many as Thought" [August 7, 2007].)

The number of captive tigers, on the other hand, has boomed. Zoos, farms, circuses, and private owners hold an estimated 15,000 to 20,000 tigers. Only a small fraction of these are part of breeding programs oriented toward conservation.

"The captive population of these wild animals has been justified based on the principle that they are the genetic representation of their natural counterparts," said study leader Shu-Jin Luo, who studies genetic variation at the National Cancer Institute in Frederick, Maryland.

"They can act as insurance against extinction in the wild."

Genes Match Geography

But many owners have no knowledge of their cats' ancestry.

To tease apart their heritage, Luo and her colleagues developed a test based on variations in 30 locations on the tiger genome that had originally been identified in domestic cats.

In an earlier study, Luo and her colleagues found that they could separate wild tigers into groups that corresponded to the recognized subspecies based on how many versions of these genetic markers the animals shared.

In the new study, the scientists screened DNA samples from 104 captive tigers living in 14 different countries. Of those, 49 could be confidently assigned to a particular subspecies, they report in Current Biology today.

"These are fairly closely related lineages that they're trying to sort out," said Michael Russello, a conservation geneticist at the University of British Columbia in Kelowna who was not involved in the study. "I think it is remarkable that they were able to find individuals from unmanaged populations that actually are purebreds of a given subspecies."

Genetic Surprises

The numbers of purebred tigers the researchers found likely overestimate the proportion of unmanaged animals with pure lineages, because many of the owners who sent samples to the team had some idea of their tiger's ancestry.

Of the 50 tigers without any pedigree, 7 could be assigned to a particular lineage based on the new genetic test.

Luo thinks that 15 to 23 percent of tigers not part of conservation breeding programs are likely to be potentially useful for preserving genetic variation unique to endangered subspecies.

Given the size of the captive population, that would mean thousands of additional useful animals.

The test can also reveal mixed ancestry. Owners of 11 tigers who thought they had purebreds turned out to own mutts instead.

"It's extremely important to know those individuals that have a hybrid origin," Russello said. Those animals should be excluded from breeding programs.

In addition, the researchers found that the captive tigers harbored at least 46 new genetic patterns that have not been found in wild animals so far.

Some of these occurred only in mixed-lineage tigers, which are currently thrown out of breeding programs when discovered.

While the findings come as welcome news, most conservationists agree that breeding programs are a last-ditch resort and that efforts should focus on protecting existing wild populations.

Tigers once ranged from the Indian subcontinent to Siberia.

Today that swath has been reduced to small remnant habitats, often depleted of prey. (Related: "Tiger Habitat Plummeted 40 Percent in 10 Years, Survey Finds" [July 20, 2006].)

"We are not at that stage where we are looking to reintroduce tigers from captive populations," said Mahendra Shrestha, who directs the Save the Tiger program based in Washington, D.C.

"The main challenge we are facing now is providing good quality habitat."

http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/
2008/04/080418-extinct-tigers_2.html

Tuesday, April 15, 2008

Triplets of rare Siberian tigers born in Yalta zoo

Triplets of rare Siberian tigers born in Yalta zoo

[15.04.2008 14:14]

The triplets of rare Siberian tigers were born in "Skazka" zoo, situated in Yalta city in southern Ukraine. It is the first private zoo in the CIS.

Zoo director Oleg Zubkov disclosed this to an UNIAN correspondent.

According to his information, the triplets were born to the family of tigress Yana and tiger Ular.

"This is not the first incident of tigers borning in the Yalta zoo, but it is a great event for us, because Siberian tigers are really very rare animals. The triplets are a very good present for us", O. Zubkov noted.

Tiger cubs are in a good condition, they were not taken away from their mother. They have not been named as yet.

UNIAN's reference. "Skazka" zoo war created in 1995. There are more than 700 animals and birds at present.

The Siberian tiger is the biggest cat in the world, and is recorded in the International Red Book. The protection of the Siberian tiger in the East of Russia is one of the main tasks of the Wild Nature World Fund (WWF).

http://www.unian.net/eng/news/news-246590.html
 



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To spot the Bengal tigers, visit Borivali National Park

To spot the Bengal tigers, visit Borivali National Park

Nitya Kaushik
Posted online: Wednesday, April 16, 2008 at 12:33:17
Updated: Wednesday, April 16, 2008 at 12:33:17

Mumbai, April 15 You don't have to visit the Kanha National Park or the Sunderbans to catch a glimpse of the royal tiger any more.

The Sanjay Gandhi National Park at Borivali, as part of its Rs 5-crore five-year scheme to promote eco-tourism in Mumbai, is displaying two of its newly acquired yellow Bengal tigers on its tiger safari trails.

So, if you take a trip now, in SGNP's well-secured mini-bus, chances are you will find a full-grown, wild yellow tiger burning bright in a water-hole less than one metre away from you. The tiger couple -- a male called Palash and a female called Basanti –- was acquired from the Vanvihar National Park, Bhopal, in exchange for two white tiger cubs, about one-and-a-half years ago. A third yellow tiger named Shiva was confiscated from a circus in Kankvli, Konkan region, said Dr Kishor Batwe, wildlife veterinarian of SGNP.

Range forest officer D L Rathod added that the tiger couple was let out last week after an entire year of rigourous training and conditioning to ensure that they are fit for display.

The national park now has nine tigers – six white and three yellow – in its premises. Batwe said: "Since 1998, the SGNP has been having safaris in the park but in a low-key manner. Till recently, we only had white tigers on display but these species are not the 'real' species as most of them are born in captivity. Unlike the yellow tigers that are born to be wild, white tigers can't survive in the jungle. One striking evidence to this is the lack of camouflage – due to the stark white colour, the white tiger can't blend into its ambience."

Batwe stated that in an effort to introduce a new attraction to the people they decided to acquire the Bengal tigers.

According to the doctor, training of the tigers is a complicated process that requires time and patience. "Initially, we used to have nine separate cages of 10 ft x12 ft for each tiger and one open area for the safari bus to ply on. We have now built larger secondary cages and two tertiary cages where the tigers can be released to acquaint them to the visitors' buses. When they learn to relax in the presence of visitors, we will let them into the open area," he said, adding that yellow tigers are now ready to be released here.

The annual budget allocated for eco-tourism is Rs 1.37 crore, which will be spent on updating several activities in the park, Conservator of Forest Dr P N Munde said.

"The budget includes maintenance of the park, upgradation of the information centre, documentations among other operations," he explained. The park officials added that they are also upgrading the deer park as a major attraction.

Range officer Rathod, who handles the lion and tiger safari in the park, added: "Aside from the Bengal tiger, we also have six lions, three males and three females in the park." Each animal consumes about 10 kg of beef every day, the officials added.

http://www.expressindia.com/latest-news/To-spot-the-Bengal-tigers-visit-Borivali-National-Park/297364/
 



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3 states join hands to protect tigers

3 states join hands to protect tigers

Tue, Apr 15 12:55 AM

Jharkhand, Chhattisgarh and Madhya Pradesh have decided to join hands to set up a 'tiger landscape' to facilitate the unhindered movement of the big cats in the three States. An initiative of the State Wildlife Wing (SWW), the project will establish a corridor over a stretch of 1,280 square km of forestland in the three States.

SSW has already submitted an Indicative Tiger Conservation Plan to the National Tiger Conservation Authority (NTCA) to take up the project in coordination with its MP and Chhattisgarh counterparts. "It's purpose is to create an environment for the 'unhindered' movement of the big cats to facilitate 'gene flow' for their healthy and sustainable population growth, because in-bred cubs inherit their parents' genetic diseases and disorders," explained S.

K. Sharma, chief conservator of forests (Wildlife).

The three states, according to him, would set up a coordinating panel of their respective wildlife officers to monitor the development of the landscape. "This apart, local people of the three states will be involved in setting up and keeping a vigil on the corridor to pre-empt poaching," he said.

The landscape along with the corridor would connect Jharkhand's Palamu Tiger Resrve (PTR) with the Sanjay Gandhi National Park (SGNP) in MP through Chhattisgarh and extend to the SGNP's adjoining area, Bandhavgarh. The corridor includes 1,028 sq kms of PTR alone.

Ironically, the SWW has presented the tiger conservationplan to the conservation authority after the Centre threatened to stop funds, if the State failed to come up with a comprehensive plan to convert Palamu Tiger Reserve into tiger conservation foundation. However, the Centre later provided guidelines for the preparation of the Tiger Conservation Authority, as it would help SWW get central funds for the PTR without hiccups.

"As per the guidelines, a tiger reserve area should have a minimum area between 800 sq km and 1,000 sq km with 80 to 100 tigers, including 20 females, to get the status of a State Tiger Conservation Foundation.

http://in.news.yahoo.com/hindustantimes/20080415/r_t_ht_nl_general/tnl-3-states-join-hands-to-protect-tiger-7244580_1.html
 



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Govt shield for Dampa big cats

Govt shield for Dampa big cats

Mizoram sets up steering committee to help check dwindling numbers
OUR CORRESPONDENT

Silchar, April 14: Better late than never.

The Mizoram government has formed the much-awaited high-level steering committee to ensure effective co-ordination among forest officials and other agencies to nurture and augment the state's tiger population.

The committee comprises government officials, non-governmental naturalists and conservationists. Though Section 38U of the Wildlife Protection Act, 1972 (WPA) stipulates that such a committee is mandatory for every state to ensure better protection of tigers, the environment and forest department in Mizoram was a little late in floating one.

A Tiger Conservation Foundation had also been constituted recently, which was emphasised in the amendment to the Wildlife Protection Act in 2006.

Mizoram boasts of 18,775 square km of forests of its total geographical area of 21,081 square km. It has a 500-square km tiger reserve at Dampa along its western border with Bangladesh. Dampa was declared a tiger reserve by the Centre in 1994.

The tiger population at Dampa, however, is on a slide. According to a report compiled by the Mizoram state environment and forest department, Dampa is now left with only six big cats, compared to 13 recorded in the last census in 1997.

The main factors for the decline in the number of tigers are encroachment, jhum (shifting) cultivation by villagers who live on the fringes of the reserve in at least a dozen hamlets and the failure of the forest authorities to carve out the core and buffer areas for tiger protection.

The forest officials, however, pointed out that the census carried out in January this year at Dampa could be misleading because the usual method of counting by pugmarks was not followed.

Instead, remote sensing gadgets and camera trapping methods were used for a tiger census. "There can be a margin of error because this is the first time that such sophisticated technique was used to count tigers," a forest department official said.


http://www.telegraphindia.com/1080415/jsp/northeast/story_9137068.jsp
 


between 0000-00-00 and 9999-99-99  

In Tamil Nadu, tiger's roar sends out new message

In Tamil Nadu, tiger's roar sends out new message

Tirunelveli (Tamil Nadu): When the tiger roars in Tamil Nadu, there is a gas cylinder in Nagamma's hut and a well in Velu's backyard. A riddle? No, it is the result of "landscape management" through a scheme that has doubled tiger numbers in the state while the population of the big cat has halved in India.

The scheme has brought a smile to Nagamma, who lives at the edge of the Papanasam forest range, about 800 km south of Chennai. The range includes the Agasthyamalai forests of the Tirunelveli-Kanyakumari districts, the Kalakad-Mundanthurai Tiger Reserve, the Kanyakumari wildlife sanctuary, the Theni forest division and the Grizzled Squirrel Wildlife Sanctuary.

Nagamma no longer gathers firewood from the forest. A man on a bicycle brings her and her neighbours in the Arumugampatti hamlet their cooking gas cylinders. "Now, I don't have to fear tigers and leopards," she says.

There are 400 such villages on the edge of the forests, where the forest department has introduced such amenities to keep people from cutting trees. "When the tiger roars, it signals the health of the entire ecosystem," says Tamil Nadu's Chief Conservator of Forests V.N. Singh.

"The roar of the tigers tells us they are safe in the forests and healthy. When there is silence, it means danger not only for the tiger but for mankind," Singh told IANS in an interview. "When the tiger roars, all the other animals run. That running is very essential to the health of any animal.

"When the tiger chases prey, it is a sign that the tiger is healthy too, just as healthy as the fleeing deer. A tiger needs about 70 deer and other wildlife to sustain itself for a year. The forest and its grassland and watersheds have to be healthy enough to support that many deer for just one tiger."

Tamil Nadu's tigers live in three forests--the Mudumalai range, the Pollachi range and the Agasthyamalai range.

This is the only state where tiger numbers have increased from 50-odd in the 2003 census to almost 100 in the latest census unveiled this January.

"From where the forest officially begins, inside the forest we keep five kilometres as a protected zone where we know people venture for livelihood reasons," Singh says. "We also mark as protected area five km outside of the official forest line." These are the most sensitive areas where human habitations meet the forest and most of the man-animal conflicts are witnessed.

"So, to mitigate this conflict, we have made an accurate need assessment. We have gone from person to person, to find out what has taken the individual to the forest."

The finding: "Women and children go into the forest mostly to collect firewood and water. We have supplied 2,000 people with cooking gas connections. We find they are too poor to pay the necessary deposit, their huts are too far away from the nearest LPG (liquefied petroleum gas) shop. So, the forest department has paid the cylinder deposit and made arrangement for delivery at their doorsteps."

For water, the department has paid the seed money and got bore wells dug in the settlements. Committees set up to manage the buffer areas in and around the forest ensure no one goes to the forest for their daily needs.

"The approach of eco-development and landscape management will remain the core of the future strategies to minimise man-wildlife conflict", Singh and A. K. Srivastava say in a paper on "Man-Wildlife conflict in Tamil Nadu."

The paper identifies poverty as one of the main reasons for dependence of the villagers on the forests. "It is of utmost necessity that dependence of people living within at least five km of the forest is reduced," the authors recommend.

This can be done by "eco-development committees all around the protected area" - a net of such committees over 51,000-sq-km of forests in the state. The committees have to develop strategies for meeting the needs of the peripheral communities from outside the forest. It has also been found that improving the economic status of the village communities can reduce their dependence on the forests.

This means help with alternative income. Landscape management, according to the paper, will "take care of not just one protected area but the whole stretch of the forest areas along with peripheral villages as one entity and sort out all issues related with that landscape in totality".

The report recommends the concept's extension also to the Wayanad-Mudumalai-Bandipur forest. The root cause of the man-wildlife conflict is "disturbance to the natural activity of wildlife in their habitat", it says.

Source: Indo-Asian News Service


http://news.in.msn.com/national/article.aspx?cp-documentid=1340034
 



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A delicate balance

A delicate balance

It is necessary to create environmental awareness and other livelihood alternatives for the villagers to keep the Sunderbans' fragile eco-system going. FRENY MANECKSHA


Over the years the biosphere's delicate balance has been upset because of shrinking habitats and poaching. This in turn escalated man-animal conflicts.

One evening in February 2002, as Col. Shakti Ranjan Banerjee, conservationist and former Director (West Bengal) of WWF India, was appreciating the splendour of the Suznekhali sanctuary in the Sunderbans, he learnt that a tiger had been sighted on Bal i island. Sunderban tigers are powerful swimmers. This one had swum across the wide river expanse that separates Bali, one of the 54 inhabited islands from the 48 uninhabited islands that form the core jungle area.

In earlier days it would have lost its life for straying into human territory. This time, even though some islanders had lost a family member in tiger attacks, they did not stone the animal. Instead, led by environmentally-conscious school teachers, they helped the forest officials to lay a trap so that it could be released back into the wild.

It was a definitive moment for Col. Banerjee. "I felt something must be done to help these villagers earn a livelihood as well as be part of the movement that seeks to preserve the unique biodiversity of this delta that has been designated a World Heritage Site by UNESCO."

Ever-changing


In the fragile ecosystem of the Sunderbans, both humans and animals wage a knife-edge battle for survival. An ever-changing dance of creation and destruction is enacted daily in this arena of rivers and tributaries because of the occurrence of two high tides and two low tides. Receding tidal waters leave behind chest-deep alluvium and create large mudflats that support a rich variety of crabs, snails and mudskippers. Estuarine crocodiles and monitor lizards come out to bask in the sun on the mudflats. But the high tide washes away large chunks of land and submerges the mudflats, forcing crabs to take shelter in muddy holes or climb trees. Crocodiles go back into the water.

Due to the high salinity, the soil becomes non-porous and oxygen cannot enter the forest areas. But, in a wonderful adaptation to nature, trees here breathe through pneumataphores (roots that grow up through the mud creating a carpet of sharp spikes which absorb oxygen) stilt roots, and perforated barks. Some 84 species of mangroves and mangrove-associate plant families not only survive in this alluvial soil but also bloom spectacularly like that of the Sundari, Golpata, Kankra and Khalsi.

Tigers too have developed different traits. Agile swimmers, they are as much at home in water as on land. They drink the saline water and eat whatever they come across — fish, crab or man. Not habitual man-eaters, they nevertheless consider man to be part of the food chain and will attack if there is a confrontation, even accidental.

For the people of the Sunderbans life is tough as there is limited land for agriculture. Other forms of livelihood like fishing, gathering honey or collecting wood may bring them into conflict with the tiger or crocodile, especially if they venture into the deep forests where creeks are very narrow and visibility is poor because of dense vegetation. This constant struggle with hostile elements has influenced the mythological traditions of the region. In a remarkable synergy of two religions, the goddess Bonbibi (mother of the forests) and her consort Dakshin Rai are worshipped by both Muslims and Hindus as protectors who can subdue the tiger. Manasa is worshipped to keep venomous snakes at bay and Manik Pir is invoked for the welfare of cows.

Over the years the biosphere's delicate balance has been upset because of shrinking habitats and poaching. This in turn escalated man-animal conflicts. In 1978, the setting up of the Tiger Reserve banned Sunderban inhabitants from venturing into the core area for fishing or collecting honey. Some villagers began adopting a hostile attitude towards forest officials and the big cats.

Vital projects


So when the Bali villagers did show willingness to help conservationists, Col. Banerjee and others resolved to initiate steps that could enable them to earn through ecotourism and other forms of livelihood. Help Tourism, a major ecotourism operator that focuses on community benefits, began a prolonged dialogue with the villagers. The concept of a Jungle Camp with ethnic cottages providing basic amenities and solar power was drawn up. This would not only generate employment but also enable villagers to have a say in administration. It would also create environmental awareness.

Help Tourism also helped organise medical camps for the Bali villagers whilst a consortium of non-governmental organisations and Belinda Wright's Wildlife Protection Society of India (WPSI) drew up developmental programmes. These include non-formal education projects with book banks, laundry and tailoring units and setting up an organic rice processing plant.

Another notable feature has been increasing interaction between villagers and tourists. Col. Banerjee accompanies tourists aboard the luxurious liner Paramahansa run by Vivada Inland Waterways and takes them to Bali where they can be familiarised with the fascinating culture of the Sunderbans. A dance-drama troupe from Bali entertains tourists with its jatra on Bonbibi and Dakshin Rai.


Environmental messages are spread through WPSI and WWF and poaching has been curbed to a great extent.

One of the biggest proponents of these activities is Anil Mistri, former poacher and now field director of WPSI. Deer meat, considered a delicacy, is often served at wedding feasts, so it was not unusual for Mistri to hunt deer like many others. The dramatic turnabout came in 2002 when a friend shot a deer that had young ones. Full of remorse, Mistri met forest officials and was inducted into conservation efforts. He has since helped build up the Bali Nature and Wildlife Conservation Society. There are 22 schools on Bali island where nature clubs are flourishing. Children are now convinced of the need not to hunt deer to maintain the ratio of deer to tigers and lessen chances of man-animal conflicts.


Global relevance


Mistri's message of protecting the Sunderbans has gone global. According to scientists, the Sunderbans are South Asia's largest "carbon sink" mopping up large amounts of carbon dioxide. It is a crucial link in the efforts to prevent global warming. At a conference, held in Argentina in 2004, he spoke first-hand of his observations on the rising sea waters that pose a great threat to the Sunderbans. "I spoke on how summers are prolonged. Cyclones blow up at any time of the year and there are high surges that threaten our settlements," says Mistri.

Satellite imagery shows that sea levels have risen at an average rate of 3.14 cm a year over two decades. At least four islands have disappeared or are losing chunks of land. Ghoramara island lost 50 per cent of its land mass and Lohachora completely disappeared. Tigers too are losing their homes and are forced to migrate.

As the big cat totters on the brink of extinction, Col. Banerjee is heartened by the way the message of awareness has spread in ripples from Bali island right up to Shamshernagar on the eastern edge of the Sunderbans. "At a 'Bagh Bachao' function there was a man I recognised. He was the father of Rupali Bauli, a young girl who had been killed and dragged away by a tiger from her hut. I am a parent and know the father's pain. But he had realised the vital need for both the big cat and man to coexist. It was a touching vindication of our faith in the people."


The Hindu - Magazine
Online edition of India's National Newspaper
Sunday, Apr 13, 2008

http://www.hindu.com/mag/2008/04/13/stories/2008041350200700.htm
 



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The eye of the tiger

The eye of the tiger

India's Bandhavgarh National Park is a beacon of hope for the endangered tiger, where visitors may still have an unforgettable close encounter with one of the world's most striking predators

Mark Angelo
Special to The Sun

Saturday, April 12, 2008

While rambling along one of the many well-worn tracks of Bandhavgarh National Park, our driver received word that a tiger had been spotted resting in the tall grass just a few hundred meters off the road. The warden was summoning his elephants to take us there so we quickly headed for the rendezvous point.

On arriving, we came across several other tourists who had also heard the news. With great anticipation, we jumped into the queue.

After several anxious minutes, an Asian elephant was led over to the side of our jeep and I pulled myself up on to a small seating platform that rested on its back. Along with the elephant driver, or "mahout," we set off into the jungle.

Lurching and swaying, the elephant plodded through the thicket of sal trees. Unusually quiet, the jungle was disturbed only be the creaking sound of our leather harness and the crunching of leaves beneath the elephant's feet.

Within minutes, we came upon a large meadow and passed through a sea of grass that, despite our lofty perch, still engulfed us. Suddenly the elephant stopped and there, on a small patch of flattened sedge growth, only metres away, was the tiger.

I stared in awe at this beautiful animal with a buttery gold coat that made her black stripes seem even more pronounced.

A large female in her prime, she paid us little attention at first. Having just awakened from her nap, she yawned and her white incisors stood out like ice picks.

The tiger then sat up and, turning towards me, her glowing amber eyes locked on to mine. It was my first eye-to-eye encounter with one of the rarest and most beautiful predators on Earth and would be something I'd never forget.

Suddenly, the elephant started shifting apprehensively. Sensing the animal's skittishness, the mahout backed the elephant away before turning him sideways to give us one last look at the tiger. All too quickly, it was time to leave.

I had come to Bandhavgarh a few days earlier to explore one of India's most prominent and popular parks. Known for its high density of tigers (perhaps the highest in all of India), the park attracts visitors from around the world.

Located about 600 kms south of Delhi, Bandhavgarh is set among the Vindhya Hills in the state of Madhya Pradesh. Its topography varies between steep ridges, open meadows and undulating hills forested with bamboo and sal trees.

Bandhavgarh is only about 400 square kilometres in size and, from much of the park, the ruins of an ancient fortress on a high ridge provide a stunning backdrop. The last occupier of the fort was the Maharaja of Rewa who managed the surrounding area as his own private hunting reserve before turning the land over to the state in 1968.

The park is also renowned as the source of the legendary white tiger (of Siegfried and Roy fame). In fact, all of the world's white tigers are descended from a single cub named Mohan that was found here in 1951.

In addition to tigers, the park is home to many other animals including sambar and spotted deer, chausingha (a four horned antelope), leopard, sloth, civet, jackal and wild boar. There are also more than 150 bird species found in the park.

But for many, the once in a lifetime opportunity to see a tiger is what brings them to this stunning place. I was no different and, after my experience of seeing a wild tiger from the back of an elephant, I was almost giddy with excitement.

After two separate trips to India and several safaris to some of the country's best known wildlife reserves, this was my first close encounter with a tiger, an animal that had intrigued me since childhood.

But while I was gleeful over what I had seen, my jubilation was partially tempered by the fact that I knew all too well that seeing a wild tiger in India was not nearly as easy as it once was. Given the great decline in tiger numbers, I also couldn't help but wonder if my children would ever have the same opportunity.

Back in 1894, when Rudyard Kipling wrote the Jungle Book, there were an estimated 50,000 Bengal tigers roaming the Indian countryside. Today, as few as 1,400 remain.

In response to growing concern about the animal's plight, India banned the hunting of tigers back in 1970 and, a few years later, it launched "Project Tiger," an initiative aimed at establishing a network of habitat reserves.

Yet, in spite of such laudable attempts, the country's tiger population has not rebounded. While habitat destruction has been a contributing factor, poaching in response to the illegal demand for tiger pelts and body parts in China and Southeast Asia has been a major cause.

While I've long been aware of the tiger's plight, it was during an earlier visit to India in 2004 that I became more personally involved. On that trip, my wife and I spent a week in the Ranthambore tiger reserve and, during our many trips into the park, we got only a fleeting glimpse of one solitary tiger.

Our guides were confounded by the reduced sightings and there were many rumours about possible poaching activity, although nothing had been proven. Shortly after we left though, a ring of poachers was arrested in a nearby village. It was later confirmed that, over the span of several months, they had killed almost half of Ranthambore's tigers.

This was a devastating blow to tiger conservation efforts, not only in Ranthambore, but across the country. Yet, on a positive note, the international publicity from this episode led Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh to strike a major task force to help save the tiger.

This culminated in a recent announcement of a new 153 million dollar program to establish eight new tiger reserves. As part of the plan, about 250 villages will be relocated away from tiger habitat and each affected family will be compensated.

While all of this is encouraging, India's tiger population remains at an historic low.

For this reason, Bandhavgarh is now a focal point for conservation and recovery efforts and, with its robust population of tigers, it represents a beacon of hope that this great cat can and will survive.

On the final day of our visit, I was out for a morning drive in a remote corner of the park when our jeep suddenly came to a stop. Our driver had heard the shrieking alarm of a langur monkey high in the treetops beside a nearby meadow. Seconds later, the forest erupted with a frenzied series of calls.

I then saw movement through the trees and those unmistakeable shades of tan and black came into view as a tiger emerged at the edge of the clearing. He was a huge male and, at close to 300 kilograms, was one of the biggest tigers in the park. Looking at him, it was difficult to imagine a more magnificent animal!

The tiger briefly scanned the open terrain and then, to our surprise, headed directly for us. He walked with a confident swagger that you'd expect from the dominant cat in the area.

We watched as the tiger crossed the road just metres from our vehicle. He then stopped at the edge of a bamboo thicket and, glancing back at us, defiantly scowled before disappearing into the forest.

Mark Angelo is the Head of the BCIT Fish and Wildlife Program and a frequent contributor to The Vancouver Sun. He is the recipient of the Order of Canada, Order of BC and the United Nations Stewardship Award for his environmental and river-conservation efforts.

http://www.canada.com/vancouversun/news/travel/story.html?id=ec92c9c0-4408-40f0-b47b-afc127ab2ed5
 


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