Public awareness key to protecting Arabian leopard
Education about the few Arabian leopards left in the wild is the key to keeping them from becoming extinct, a conservationist said.
Published: February 25, 2003 00:00
By Jay B. Hilotin
Education about the few Arabian leopards left in the wild is the key to keeping them from becoming extinct, a conservationist said.
"Our best 'guestimate' is that there may be about 60 of them left in Jebel Samhan and 100 to 150 in Jebel Dhofar (in Oman's mountainous region)," said Dr Andrew Spalton, who studies Arabian leopards.
Loss of habitat, scarcity of prey and private animal skin collectors are considered the major threats to the Arabian leopard, of which only about 250 are left in the wild, according to best estimates.
One of the Middle East's rarest predators, the nimr is the smallest of the leopard family, about three times the size of a domestic cat. It lives in the arid coastal mountain ranges of the Arabian Peninsula.
The animal is so scarce that conservationists believed it was extinct until several specimens were found in 1976. Since then, conservationists have struggled to establish accurately how many survive in the mountains of Sinai in Egypt, the mountains in Taif by the Red Sea in Saudi Arabia, the Hajar range that straddles Yemen and Oman and the Gulf countries.
Herds of domestic goat devastate the plants which once fed its natural prey: the Nubian ibex, Arabian gazelle, small camels and wild goats. The leopard is then driven into more remote areas or forced to hunt goats, making it a target.
Using infrared-activated camera traps and satellite tracking, Dr Spalton's team has studied the leopard population to determine its movement and make an informed guess about numbers.
"The numbers are quite small. If these populations are isolated, then they are less viable," he added.
Dr Spalton, a field researcher for many years, also presented a 15-minute video of his team's conservation work to members of the Dubai Natural History Group (DNHG) on Sunday at the Emirates Academy of Hospitality Management.
Education, he told the 50 or so DNHG members who attended, must be coupled with other relevant moves. "Public awareness is extremely important in leopard protection. We go to the countryside, the schools and join exhibitions."
The animal conservationist is also a speaker at the three-day International Conservation Workshop, which kicked off on Sunday in Sharjah's Desert Park. His team is looking into the possibility of restocking the leopard population with animals bred in captivity.
Captive breeding of Arabian leopards started in Oman in 1985.
Currently, 39 leopards – including the nine medium-size felines in Sharjah – have been bred in captivity.
Animals that once roamed the Arabian peninsula's diverse terrain but have now disappeared include lions, ostriches and cheetahs. Although Jebel Samhan in Oman was declared a nature reserve in 1997, encroachment continues by humans who harvest frankincense trees in the mountains.
Their domesticated animals compete for food with the gazelles and ibexes, which are the main prey of leopards.
While the Arabian leopard population is described as "critically endangered" by the World Conservation Union's Red List, there are no protected areas in the UAE.
There is no UAE legislation to protect the nimr although the Arabian Leopard Trust has made headway in its protection.
https://gulfnews.com/uae/public-awareness-key-to-protecting-arabian-leopard-1.348277