Showing posts with label Poaching. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Poaching. Show all posts
Wednesday, October 24, 2018
Three Cubs of the Rare White Bengal Tiger Were Born in a Crimean Safari Park
Belogorsk, Crimea - Three cubs of the rare white bengal tiger born in a Crimean safari park were shown to the public.
Born in early October, the cubs were still not able to open their eyes and squeaked as they tried to crawl on the park grass.
The Crimean safari park chief zookeeper said the birth of the blue-eyed bengal tiger triplets was an important contribution to the park's collection, which also helps saving the animals from extinction.
Two of the cubs are male, and one female.
The zookeeper reports that the little ones are developing really well.
White tigers are a genetic variation of the better-known orange bengal tigers.
Between 5000 and 7000 tigers live in the wild, down from 100,000 at the start of the 20th-century.
Poaching, deforestation and over-hunting of their natural prey have hit their numbers.
The peninsula of Crimea is recognized internationally as part of Ukraine, although it has been largely integrated into Russia after Moscow annexed the territory in 2014.
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Wednesday, March 23, 2016
Meet Ruger, The First Anti-Poaching Dog in Zambia, Where He is Now Responsible for Putting 150 Poachers Out of Business
Ruger, once considered a “bad” dog, is perfect for his
job. Because he had a very rough start
in life, he was aggressive and would snap at people, but part of his
personality has made him easily trained to become the first anti-poaching dog
in Zambia, where he is now responsible for putting 150 poachers out of
business.
“Bad dogs have an overwhelming desire to bring you things,”
Megan Parker told The Guardian. “Dogs love telling you what they know. They
have an inability to quit.
”Parker is the director of research at Working Dogs for
Conservation in Montana. She searches
shelters for difficult, “unadoptable” dogs who’d have no problem putting
poachers in their place.
Ruger was born on the Blackfeet Reservation in
Montana. When he was young, his owner
shot his littermates, but he was able to flee.
He wound up in a shelter, where he was noticed by a trainer who told
WD4C about him.
At first, Ruger was aggressive, and would bite people. Parker had a hard time getting him to the
vet, and he hated small spaces. But
there was something about him that encouraged her to keep working with him. However, there was something else that stood
in Ruger’s way of becoming an anti-poaching dog at all.
“Early on in his training, Meg was under pressure from her
colleagues to decide if Ruger would make the cut,” said Pete Coppolillo,
executive director at WD4C. “If a dog doesn’t work out, we make sure they have
a forever home. We all wondered if Meg should start finding a place for Ruger,
who was losing his sight.
”But she knew that Ruger had the drive necessary to make
the cut.
“These dogs have an unrelenting drive,” she said. “For a
dog that doesn’t stop, you can train that dog to bring you things.”
Parker was eventually able to match up Ruger with the Delta
Team scouts, a law enforcement unit operated by the South Luangwa Conservation
Society and the Zambia Wildlife Authority.
The scouts had little experience with dogs, and were leery of the idea
that a dog could help.
Ruger proved his worth at his first day on the job. Roadblocks were set up to search vehicles for
illegal paraphernalia.
“It takes humans an hour or more to search a car,” said
Coppolillo, “whereas it takes dogs three to four minutes.”
Ruger sat down and glared at one of the passing cars.
“That’s his alert [signal],” Coppolillo continued.
Several pieces of luggage were inside the vehicle, and the
scouts who searched them came up empty-handed.
But Ruger kept his eye on one bag, which contained a matchbox in a
plastic bag. Inside of it was a primer
cap, which ignites gunpowder in the illegal muzzle loaders that poachers rely
on.
“At that moment, everyone believed that Ruger knew what he
was doing,” said Coppolillo. “They learned to think of Ruger as a colleague.”
Now he’s been a valuable team member for a year and a half.
“He’s a hero who’s responsible for dozens of arrests and
has convinced many skeptics of his detection skills,” Coppolillo noted.
Some people likened his skills to witchcraft, but at a
courthouse demonstration, a scout hid a piece of ivory and Ruger found it in
only a couple minutes. And his
deteriorating vision hasn’t impaired him one bit.
“His skills have sharpened.
He’s working with a few younger dogs, who are somewhat goofy and get
distracted like most puppies do,” Coppolillo said. “Ruger remains focused
despite many distractions, such as having wild animals close by. Baboons are
the worst. His lack of eyesight works in his favor because he almost entirely
focuses on his sense of smell.
”Because the work is very dangerous, Ruger does not have to
work every day, and Godfrey, a scout, rewards him with games of tug-of-war when
he nabs someone.
“Poachers are well-armed and well-trained,” Coppolillo said.
“African elephants don’t live throughout the continent. Poachers kill elephants
where they reside and smuggle them to places where they don’t live to throw law
enforcement off their tracks.
”Though it is illegal to hunt within South Luangwa National
Park’s boundaries, poachers do it anyway, and over the years, many scouts have
colluded with them. Good scouts are hard
to come by, and in Africa, it’s even more difficult to find dogs like Ruger.
“Good dog selection is absolutely essential,” Coppolillo
said. “Village dogs simply don’t have the drive to do this kind of work. There
are only a handful of suitable and reputable kennels in Africa. Most are
focused on selling security and military dogs, so they’re not as well
socialized as a conservation dog needs to be. Plus, they generally sell those
dogs for much more than what it would cost us to source a dog in the US.
”Parker will continue her dedicated work of finding
suitable American shelter dogs to send to Africa to keep saving the lives of
countless elephants.
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