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Latest News - Conservation News


A single Northern Bald Ibis was a major surprise in Coto Donana during our recent Best of Coto Donana tour in April.

 

The critically endangered Panamanian Golden Frog in Panama

 

Interest in Naturetrek Butterfly Conservation tours continues to grow steadily. In 2007 we took 66 clients to some of the best butterfly destinations in the world.

 

Did you know that Naturetrek run a selection of group butterfly tours, guided by expert butterfly enthusiasts, that have been designed to allow you to enjoy and learn about butterflies in the company of fellow enthusiasts. 10% of the proceeds from each tour is donated to the well-known and highly regarded British conservation charity, Butterfly Conservation, and invested directly in the conservation of British and European butterflies.

 

More information about these hugely sucessful tours can be found on the Butterfly Conservation page.

 

Provencal Fritillary by Matt Hobbs

Provencal Fritillary by Matt Hobbs

 


 

Save the Rhino International and the Environmental Investigation Agency are co-hosting the Fifth Douglas Adams Memorial Lecture, a talk by Dr Richard Leakey, on Thursday 15 March at the Royal Geographic Society in London SW7. In this talk, Dr Leakey will draw on his own experiences in Kenya, as founder and Director of the Kenya Wildlife Service and as the Head of Kenya's Civil Service to reflect on the successes, current problems and future challenges.

 

Richard Erskine Leakey was born on 19 December 1944, the second of Louis and Mary Leakey's three sons. Quickly following in his parents’ footsteps, his first career was in the field of paleoanthropology, with many important finds including (with Alan Walker in 1984), "Turkana Boy," a Homo erectus roughly 1.6 million years old, one of the most complete skeletons ever found. In 1968, aged just 24, Richard Leakey was appointed Director of the National Museums of Kenya.

 

In 1989 Richard left his post to become Director of the Kenya Wildlife Service. In this capacity, he spearheaded efforts to end rampant elephant poaching, but he made political enemies in the process. Nonetheless, the elephant population has since stabilised and continues to grow. In 1993 Leakey survived a serious plane crash and the following year he resigned as director of the Kenya Wildlife Service, though he continues to be active in political and environmental arenas.

 

As the former Director of Kenya's National Museums and former director of the Kenya Wildlife Service, he has used his leadership skills and considerable influence to raise money for the preservation of Kenyan culture and wildlife. Never one to back down on a challenge, in 1995 Richard Leakey took a stand against corruption in Kenya’s government by forming Safina, an opposition party. Despite being subjected to beatings, death threats, and constant government surveillance, Leakey has continued his crusade for political justice. Although no longer active in fieldwork, Dr Leakey, as one of the foremost authorities on wildlife and nature conservation, continues to educate others about the dangers of environmental degradation through his many lectures and books.

 

The lecture is in aid of Save the Rhino International and the Environmental Investigation Agency, two charities supported by Douglas Adams. Douglas developed his deep-seated interest in wildlife conservation during a 1985 visit to Madagascar, which eventually resulted in a book (Last Chance to See) about the plight of species facing extinction. Douglas Adams died unexpectedly in 2001 at the age of 49. These Memorial Lectures continue to explore the themes in which Douglas was so interested.

 

If you are interested in attending this lecture please contact Zoe at EIA on 020 7357 7474 or by email.

 


 

 

 

White-tailed eagle

White-tailed eagle - Martin Graeff

 

In a hope to boost environmental tourism a conservation programme backed by the Suffolk Wildlife Trust and the RSPB will soon see the reintroduction of the White-tailed eagle - Britain's largest bird of prey – Flying over the coastline of Suffolk, England.

 

"A feasibility study has identified that the Suffolk coast - in terms of habitat and available prey - is the most suitable place in the UK for the reintroduction programme. It has a range of habitats, from estuary to marshland, and is rich in prey." Said: Julian Roughton, chief executive of Suffolk Wildlife Trust.

 

Currently the only place that the White-tailed eagles breed, in the UK, are on cliffs located on coastal areas of Western Scotland. The White-tailed eagles also visit the UK from Eastern Europe and Scandinavia.

 

Experts still need to analyse the impact the birds might have on other localised wildlife.

 

"We will need to take into account the potential effect this might have on other wildlife. The bittern and the avocet are among internationally important species that nest on the Suffolk coast."


 


 

 

 

Komodo Dragon Hatching

Komodo Dragon Hatching - Frank Peters

 

Scientists report of two cases where female Komodo dragons have produced offspring without male contact.

 

One of the Komodo Dragons named ‘Flora’ a resident of Chester Zoo in the UK, is awaiting her clutch of eight eggs to hatch, with a due-date any time now.

 

Flora, who has never been kept with a male Komodo dragon, produced 11 eggs earlier this year. Three died off, providing the material needed for genetic tests.

 

Tests carried out have revealed their eggs had developed without being fertilised by sperm - a process called parthenogenesis. The researchers said that, to ensure genetic diversity of Komodo dragons kept in captivity, zoos should perhaps keep males and females together to avoid asexual reproduction.

 

It is thought that lizards could make use of the ability to reproduce asexually when, for example, a lone female was washed up alone on an island with no males to breed with.

 

There are currently, at last count fewer than 4,000 Komodo dragons living in the wild, found living on three islands in Indonesia: Komodo, Flores and Rinca.

 

Adult males can grow up to 3m (10ft) in length and weigh up to 90kg (200lb) - making them the biggest lizards in the world.

 


 

Whale Watching

Sperm Whale | White Breach by Erik Ogan

 

An online petition has been launched to raise awareness of whale conservation and to campaign for the end to commercial whaling. The website, Whales Revenge, aims to gather 1 million signatures for a petition to stop whaling. So far, over 285,000 signatures have been gathered.

 

Find out more by going to the Whales Revenge Petition website

 

For more information on this subject naturetrek recommends the following sites for their information and support of the cause to end whaling:

Greenpeace

Boycott Japan

International Fund For Animal Welfare

World Wildlife Fund

Natural Resources Defence Council

Save the Whales

 

For more information on Whale Watching please visit the Naturetrek Whale Watching Tours page

 

 


 

Stephen Mills - naturalist, author, wildlife film-maker and Special Consultant to EIA - provides an insight into the work of EIA

 

When I published my book on Tigers in 2004 I felt optimistic about their future, especially in India. I’d just finished a joyous TV filming trip in Bandhavgarh and Kanha, where we had clocked up 88 sightings in a month and filmed 10 different Tigers in a single morning. But a year later many of us were in despair. A wave of Tiger poaching for skins had culminated in the complete depopulation of Sariska Tiger Reserve and the decimation of numbers in Panna, Ranthambore and several lesser known reserves.

 

In the summer of 2005, EIA teamed up with local investigators from the Wildlife Protection Society of India to find out where so many skins were going. Their journey ended in Tibet and their subsequent photographs, films and reports astonished the world. What they discovered was a new fashion amongst Tibetans to demonstrate their status and wealth by wearing whole Tiger skins at their huge openair horse festivals. There were hundreds of fresh skins on display. Consequently, the Dalai Lama, disturbed that Buddhists might be driving a market that was bringing one of the world’s most endangered and charismatic animals close to extinction, urged his people to stop wearing the skins. And how did they respond? In widespread displays of remorse they burned them. By some reckonings, some $2 million worth of tiger skins have gone up in smoke.

 

The problem is not yet solved. Poaching continues and when EIA/WPSI returned to Tibet and China in August 2006, they found that, while far fewer Tibetans were wearing skins, some of the slack had been taken up by wealthy Chinese. What the story illustrates, however, is the value of up-to-date, accurate information. Gathering such data is what EIA does best, often undercover, often in dangerous or difficult situations. In recent months EIA agents have been threatened, arrested and imprisoned without charge, had their tyres slashed and much worse.

 

The environmental crimes that EIA tries to expose can poison the roots of government and affect the lives of millions of people. This is large scale organised crime, netting billions of dollars a year and second only to drugs and arms smuggling in its capacity to rob or damage the world community. This is why EIA tries always to engage with governments to achieve change, if necessary behind the scenes but always with inviolable data. In November 2005, for instance, EIA suspected a number of Chinese companies were smuggling huge amounts of illegally produced CFCs (Chloroflurocarbons) that destroy the earth’s stratospheric ozone layer. Through a clever sting operation, investigators were able to film the entire smuggling process. Instead of going for a public blitz, EIA took the film and report to the Chinese authorities and the Montreal Protocol, the treaty that governs the phase out of CFCs. The result is that China has clamped down on the smugglers, put new regulations in place and taken a lead in establishing major new regional co-operative customs initiatives.

 

Unfortunately, avoiding publicity, though sometimes strategically essential, keeps us poor. EIA’s whale and dolphin campaign has, for example, managed to persuade over 3,000 supermarkets in Japan to stop selling whale meat. This helps to disprove the claims of a heavy demand for the product by which Japanese whaling tries to justify itself. But the supermarkets asked EIA in return not to publicise this agreement widely, with the result that the campaign remains one of our most under-funded albeit effective arms.

 

Founded in 1984 and with fewer than 30 employees, EIA punches far above its weight. Apart from tigers, ozone and whales, EIA works on ivory smuggling (it was instrumental in getting the ban on the international ivory trade agreed in 1989) and illegal logging in South-east Asia. In the last year EIA has tracked illegally sourced hardwoods to the shop floors of leading UK and European DIY chains and provided data that led to the biggest crackdown on timber smugglers in Indonesian history. We greatly value our relationship with Naturetrek and the chance it gives us to befriend so many likeminded people. In a suffocating world even travel is no longer an innocent activity. Each of us has to make travel count and Naturetrek customers can do that by supporting organisations like EIA that work every day for a better environment.

 

Last year Naturetrek's EIA tours raised over £8,000 to assist the charity. Fund-raising tours planned for 2007 (10% going to EIA) include:

 

Wild India — Panna National Park (10 days)
departs 2nd Mar & 23rd Nov ’07 Cost: £1,795

 

India’s Big Game (9 days — Kaziranga)
departs 22nd Feb & 15th Nov ’07 Cost: £1,795

 

Borneo’s Orang-utans (11 days)
departs 7th Sep ’07 Cost: £2,195

 

You can help support the EIA gain greater protection for threatened and endangered species and their habitats. To find out more visit their website.


 


 

The Madagascar Pochard which had not seen in the wild since the early nineties and thought to be 'possibly extinct' has been found in a remote part of northern Madagascar.

 

To read the full story click here or here.

 


 

 

Waved Albatross on 2007 Naturetrek BrochureA new study has found that the decline of the Galapagos Waved Albatross (featured on the front of the 2007 Naturetrek brochure) population is linked to fishing. Approximately 1% of the entire world population is killed each year as a result of being harvested for human consumption or unintentionally caught whilst fishing.


Jill Awkerman, a graduate student from Wake Forest University said “If that happens every year, that is not sustainable,” and "In a matter of decades, you could be talking about extinction."


To read the full article click here.

 


 

One of the most depressing and alarming of all conservation forecasts is the gloomy prediction that all the planet's great apes may become extinct in the wild within the next ten years. For anyone with a love of wildlife it is unbelievable that mankind should so carelessly exterminate our closest living relatives but relentless destruction of habitats and persecution of the animals seems almost unstoppable. 'Almost' is the key word and fortunately there are many dedicated individuals and organisations fighting to prevent this downward spiral into oblivion and provide a glimmer of hope for the future survival of such magnificent creatures as the Orang-utan in Asia. Naturetrek has collaborated for a number of years with the Environmental Investigation Agency raising funds to help finance conservation projects around the world. One such project is the battle to save the dwindling population of Orang-utans in Sabah and the 2005 Naturetrek tour generated over £2,000 to assist in this vital work. Although the Naturetrek donation is a positive example of Responsible Tourism, the tour was much more than just a fund-raising exercise and the participants enjoyed a breathtaking selection of tropical wildlife including hornbills, pittas, broadbills, comical Proboscis Monkeys and the never to be forgotten experience of watching Orang-utans in the wild. An account of the birds and beasts seen during our 2005 tour is contained in Chris Kehoe's excellent report, which may be viewed when you click here.

 


 
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