Cheetah’s plight

cheetahThe cheetah, Acinonyx jubatus, is the sole member of its genus. Twenty thousand years ago, cheetahs roamed throughout the savannahs and plains of four continents: Africa, Asia, Europe, and North America.

About 10,000 years ago – because of climate changes – all but one species of the cheetah, jubatus, became extinct. With the drastic reduction in their numbers, close relatives were forced to breed, and the cheetah became genetically inbred, meaning all cheetahs are closely related.

Inbreeding occurs when members of the same family or close relatives breed only among themselves. For example, when you look around, you see different hair colors, eye colors, and heights. If you took blood from everybody in the room, and looked at the proteins in the blood, you would see proteins also vary between each person, just like hair color. When you look at the proteins in the blood of cheetahs, they are very similar; it looks as if they are identical twins of one another, meaning they are closely related.

The study of biological inheritance is called “genetic research.” Genes, which are composed of DNA, store the information that an individual inherits from his or her parents. Genes in one animal vary from the same genes in another animal of the same species. By looking at the amount of variation existing in genes, scientists, called “geneticists” can begin to understand the relationships of animals within population, and how infectious diseases may affect that population. Also, by comparing the amount of variation between different species, geneticists can help us understand the evolutionary process.

When geneticists looked at the amount of variation within the genes of the cheetah, they found that cheetahs exhibit much lower levels of variation than other mammals. In most species, related individuals share about 80 percent of the same genes. With cheetahs, this figure rises to approximately 99 percent. The genetic inbreeding in cheetahs has led to low survivorship (a large number of animals dying), poor sperm quality, and greater susceptibility to disease. Inbred animals suffer from a lack of genetic diversity. This means cheetahs lack the ability to adjust to sudden changes in the environment, such as disease epidemics, and have unusually high susceptibility to certain viruses. For example, if a virus gets into a healthy population of leopards, not every animal dies; just some do, because leopards are genetically diverse. But if every animal is genetically the same, like the cheetah, and one gets infected, all of them may become infected and die off. Because of their lack of genetic diversity, a deadly virus could wipe out all of the worlds’ wild cheetahs instead of just the susceptible animals. It depends on a species’ genetic differences.

Evolution eliminates traits in organisms that are least suited for survival. Some of the decline in the cheetah’s genetic diversity is accounted for by its specialization through natural selection. The decrease in genetic diversity resulting from natural selection has benefited the species’ survival as it has made the cheetah better adapted to its environment. However, the effects of this occurrence are small when compared to the effects of the inbreeding that occurred 10,000 years ago from a population bottleneck.

To increase genetic diversity in captivity, zoos take great care to make sure that only unrelated animals mate. Scientists are working on ways to enhance breeding through artificial insemination, and in vitro fertilization (IVF). Because of genetic inbreeding, male cheetahs have poor sperm quality. Abnormal sperm cannot swim properly, reducing the chance of fertilizing eggs and producing offspring. Artificial insemination (A-I) is a laboratory technique wherein scientists place sperm in the reproductive tract of a female. This means the sperm have less distance to swim before reaching the eggs. Mating between male and female animals does not take place. Artificial insemination has produced cheetah cubs in the United States. Using these technologies, A-I and IVF, semen, and eggs can be collected from wild Namibian Cheetahs for use in captive breeding programs. Because Namibia has the largest population of cheetahs, the genes represented in this population are important to captive cheetah survival worldwide.

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Snow leopard

snow leopardThe endangered snow leopard survives among the highest mountain peaks in the world. Perfectly adapted to its harsh mountain environment the snow leopard’s only threat is from humans. With as few as 3,500 of these mystical cats left in the wild they need our help. See www.snowleopard.org to learn more about how you can help save these beautiful cats.

Winter means deep snow throughout the mountains of Central Asia where wild snow leopards live. The harsh winter weather makes clear how well the snow leopard is adapted to its environment. Its thick fur grows longer in the winter—up to 12 centimeters (nearly 5 inches) long on its belly. Its large, broad paws act like snowshoes, helping the cat walk on top of the drifts of snow, and long fur between its toes helps protect its feet from frostbite. The snow leopard even has a built-in scarf, its long, bushy tail that it often wraps around its body and face for added warmth when resting.

Despite these advantages, winter is a hard time for snow leopards. Human-snow leopard conflicts often increase in the winter, as the cats follow the herds of their wild prey down to lower altitudes where they are also more likely to come in contact with humans. Food is scarce, and hungry snow leopards occasionally kill and eat domestic livestock, increasing the possibility of retribution killings by herders.

Although snow leopards are solitary, they have overlapping home ranges, which helps males and females find each other during the mating season from January to March. A female will sometimes climb to the top of a peak or ridgeline and make long, wailing calls to let males in the area know she is ready to mate. The cats also communicate with each other through scent marking and other sign along snow leopard trails. When they mate, a male will usually stay with a female for about a week before returning to his solitary rounds. Cubs will be born in spring or early summer.

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Rare Zoo-born Rhino Returns to Land of Ancestors

 Save the Rhino International

A rare Sumatran rhinoceros, the first born in captivity in more than 100 years, arrived in the country of his ancestors on Tuesday as part of an international breeding programme.

Andalas had set off from the Cincinnati Zoo for the 40-hour journey that took him via Amsterdam to the capital of Indonesia, Jakarta, where he landed on Tuesday evening. He was then transported to a lorry which set off to the western end of Java, from where a ferry was scheduled to take the rhino on to Sumatra for an 8-10 hour drive to the sanctuary.  The hairy Sumatran rhino is the smallest of the rhino species but can still weigh from 1,300 to 1,800 pounds (600 to 800 kg), so transporting Andalas has not been a simple task. Despite this, wildlife officials overseeing his journey seemed happy that he was in good health.

Andalas, born in the Cincinnati Zoo in September 2001, is the first Sumatran rhino born in captivity in 112 years. There are only about 300 Sumatran, or hairy, rhinos still surviving in the wild in southeast Asia. The Javan rhino is the rarest species, with only around 60 individuals remaining. “But Sumatran rhinos are arguably even more critically endangered than their rarer cousins, due to habitat loss and their relative accessibility to poachers” said Henry French of Save the Rhino International.

Save the Rhino supports the Sumatran Rhino Sanctuary in Way Kambas National Park that Andalas will now call home. The sanctuary provides a home for Sumatran rhinos found in threatening or unviable situations, and is a starting point for an international programme to form a sustainable population of captive Sumatran rhinos. One of the females to whom Andalas will be introduced to in the sanctuary is Rosa, who was found exhausted and infected by cattle parasites in Bukit Barisan Selatan National Park. In November she celebrated the anniversary of her arrival, with a birthday cake being presented to her by staff.

www.savetherhino.org

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Animal rights

animal rightsAlmost all of us grew up eating meat, wearing leather, and going to circuses and zoos. Many of us bought our beloved “pets” at pet shops, had guinea pigs, and kept beautiful birds in cages. We wore wool and silk, ate McDonald’s burgers, and fished. We never considered the impact of these actions on the animals involved. For whatever reason, you are now asking the question: Why should animals have rights?

In his book Animal Liberation, Peter Singer states that the basic principle of equality does not require equal or identical treatment; it requires equal consideration. This is an important distinction when talking about animal rights. People often ask if animals should have rights, and quite simply, the answer is “Yes!” Animals surely deserve to live their lives free from suffering and exploitation. Jeremy Bentham, the founder of the reforming utilitarian school of moral philosophy, stated that when deciding on a being’s rights, “The question is not ‘Can they reason?’ nor ‘Can they talk?’ but ‘Can they suffer?’” In that passage, Bentham points to the capacity for suffering as the vital characteristic that gives a being the right to equal consideration. The capacity for suffering is not just another characteristic like the capacity for language or higher mathematics. All animals have the ability to suffer in the same way and to the same degree that humans do. They feel pain, pleasure, fear, frustration, loneliness, and motherly love. Whenever we consider doing something that would interfere with their needs, we are morally obligated to take them into account.

Supporters of animal rights believe that animals have an inherent worth—a value completely separate from their usefulness to humans. We believe that every creature with a will to live has a right to live free from pain and suffering. Animal rights is not just a philosophy—it is a social movement that challenges society’s traditional view that all nonhuman animals exist solely for human use. As PETA founder Ingrid Newkirk has said, “When it comes to pain, love, joy, loneliness, and fear, a rat is a pig is a dog is a boy. Each one values his or her life and fights the knife.”

Only prejudice allows us to deny others the rights that we expect to have for ourselves. Whether it’s based on race, gender, sexual orientation, or species, prejudice is morally unacceptable. If you wouldn’t eat a dog, why eat a pig? Dogs and pigs have the same capacity to feel pain, but it is prejudice based on species that allows us to think of one animal as a companion and the other as dinner.

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Largest Ever Black Rhino Translocation in Kenya

Lizzie Whitebread- Save the Rhino International

Lewa Wildlife Conservancy, in partnership with the Kenya Wildlife Service
and Ol Pejeta Conservancy has started the largest ever black rhino
translocation in Kenya. The intention is to move 34 black rhino in total. A
total of four animals will be moved from Ol Jogi reserve and 26 from Solio
Ranch into the new conservation area at Ol Pejeta prior to the fence between
it and Sweetwaters being taken down later in the year. To compensate Ol Jogi
four more will be moved from Solio to this ranch. This three way move keeps
the gene pool fresh at Ol Pejeta. A team of over 16 people have been
deployed from Lewa and will be working on the west side of Laikipia for over
a month.

As at Monday 12th February 20 animals have been moved, all successfully. If
all goes well the team may stay to move some Giraffe as well. All quite an
achievement.

Lewa is also pleased to announce the birth of another black rhino on the
Conservancy. The mother, Waiwai, last gave birth two and a half years ago
and this calf has been pushed away by Mum for a couple of months while she
looks after her new child (sex unknown at the moment). If you would like to
name this new calf, or to view Lewa’s funding wish list for 2007 please get
in touch with Joanne Machira at the Lewa Wildlife Conservancy – just visit
www.lewa.org for details.

For more information on rhinos, translocations and the Laikipia region
please visit www.savetherhino.org

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Wild Bactrian Camel

camelThe wild Bactrian camel (Camelus bactrianus) a two-humped ancestor of domesticated camels, is now considered “critically endangered” according to the International Union for Conservation of Nature and Natural Resources (IUCN), a non-profit conservation organization based in Cambridge, England.

Perhaps only 950 wild camels survive in their native desert habitat of northwest China and Mongolia—many of them in a remote, harsh desert area that was, until recently, a Chinese nuclear test range. The reclassification of wild Bactrian camels to “critically endangered” status in October 2002 places the camel in the same category as the panda, a standing that reflects the increasingly precarious position of that small population.

“This means that the wild population of Bactrian camels is on the brink of extinction,” said Craig Hilton-Taylor, a program officer with the IUCNs endangered species listing project. “If it continues declining at the current rate, we will lose it.”

Observations made during five field expeditions starting in 1993 by John Hare and the United Kingdom-based Wild Camel Protection Foundation suggest that the surviving populations may be facing an 80 percent decline within the next three generations.

“I’m sorry, of course, that the situation is so critical,” said Hare, citing the new designation of wild Bactrian camels to critically endangered status. “But I’m also glad, because hopefully this change of status will increase awareness of this remarkable animal’s plight.”

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Now you see it, now you don’t


A cloud leopard isn’t able to change its spots. A cyanea octopus, on the other hand, can change its colors and skin consistency in the twinkle.

By contracting muscles that increase or minimize pigment cells called chromatophores, the cyanea can quickly merge into its environment to stay away from predators and trail prey.

Watch one of these “masters of disguise” turn from a modest rock shape to a noxious tent, and acquire a sneak glance under the octopus’s extended tentacles to see how the cephalopod takes pleasure in a crab snack.

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