Archive for July 2010

Orangutan Bridges

Posted by in community-based conservation,Endangered Species,orangutan,Travel

Today, one of the major threats to the long-term survival of the orang-utan in the area is the intense fragmentation process that results from these recent man-made transformations and jeopardizes animal’s movements. Recent surveys conducted by the “Kinabatangan Orang-utan Conservation Project” (KOCP) and the Sabah Wildlife Department (SWD) have shown that the Kinabatangan orang-utan population is split into at least 20 different sub-populations. It is well established that fragmented and isolated wildlife populations face increased risks of inbreeding, diseases, and localized extinction.

In 2003, KOCP and the Sabah Wildlife Department decided to set up rope bridges above the tributaries of the Kinabatangan River to provide access for arboreal species to cross these water bodies. So far, a total of seven bridges have been installed. These bridges are tied up to remaining trees on both sides of the tributaries and provide a physical connection between the two banks.

This bridge project was initially supported by zoos (Cleveland Metroparks, Columbus Zoo, the Houston Zoo) and other KOCP partners. Over the years, multiple designs were tested in an attempt to find a suitable model that could be used by the orang-utans. Over the years, several witnesses claimed to have seen orang-utans using the KOCP bridges, and the first photographic evidence of this was finally obtained in February 2010.

Although the evidenced use of these bridges is a success for the KOCP partnerships/rope-bridge project, in reality, these rope bridges are only a temporary fix. There remains the urgent need to re-establish contiguous forest between isolated patches of habitat that are inhabited by the orang-utans. To be successful in a constantly changing environment, efficient conservation measures need to be undertaken at the landscape level, incorporating a variety of stakeholders and multiple-use habitats where people and wildlife live together.

Art of Conservation is Saving Gorillas by Inspiring Childern

Posted by in Africa,community-based conservation,Endangered Species,Gorilla

We are proud to partner with an inspirational organization called Art of Conservation.  The Art of Conservation project commenced in 2007 and works in poor rural communities bordering Volcanoes National Park in Rwanda.  Kids are given the opportunity to connect with nature and endangered species through various forms of art.  The focus of the program is to empower the kids and instill a sense of pride and respect for the environment and for each other.   

Every kid(including myself) loves to dress up and pretend.  What better way to enstill a deeper empathy and understanding for their local endangered species then to have the kids imagine being the species?   Each year in June during Igitaramo, a cultural festival that celebrates Rwanda’s environment and biodiversity, AoC students put on song and dance performances while wearing the masks.

For “Mu Birunga,” a song about mountain gorillas, students get to wear these gorilla masks; for “Heroes of the Forest,” a song about the many different wild animals that inhabit Rwanda, costumed children depict more than 10 different species.

Staff artists craft these beautiful animal masks in the Art of Conservation studio, depicting mountain gorillas, golden monkeys, forest buffaloes, and other species that inhabit Rwanda’s national parks. The artists sculpt masks using clay molds and papier mache, and hand paint each to look as realistic as possible.

Youth programs are critical to the success of  any conservation effort.  AoC approaches learning through a unique method, using visual, auditory, and performance arts to teach lessons and inspire creativity in its students.

Come and visit the new and improved conservation kiosk- A message from the conservation intern.

Posted by in community-based conservation,Endangered Species,Field Research,Going Green,orangutan,Sea Turtles,Texas,What You Can Do

Hello to all!
 As this is my first blog I think I should give you a little bit of information as to what I do as the conservation intern here at the zoo.
  I am working with the conservation department to fuse the message of conservation with the Zoo and to better impart information to the guests about the Zoo’s projects. I am currently working to improve the conservation Kiosk which is located just by the main door for the Kip Aquarium.
In this blog I will keep you posted on not only the fabulous new updates to the Conservation Kiosk, but also the tons of other Conservation projects at the zoo, and the ways you can help out.
Conservation Kiosk Update!
The Conservation Kiosk is getting a new look with the addition of some new eye catching posters.  These posters offer a glimps at some of the Houston zoo’s local and international conservation projects, as well as some tips of what you can do to help endangered species all over the globe.
The Conservation Kiosk is located right next to the entrance of the Kip Aquarium, so come and check it out the next time you visit the zoo.

Till next time,
Elliott the intern

Orphan Cheetahs Released: Cheetah Conservation Botswana

Posted by in Africa,Carnivores,community-based conservation,Endangered Species

June 21st saw the release of Cheetah Conservation Botswana’s orphaned cheetahs in northern Botswana. Both cubs were fitted with satelite GPS collars to record their movements post release. The cubs are been temporarily held in a large boma, within the concession whilst …they adjust to their new surroundings. An update the following week showed they were adapting to their new environment and doing well.

From the initial news in March of ’09 of the transfer of the cubs from the Department of Wildlife and National Parks, to the rearing and release of these two individuals, to get the orphaned cheetahs to this point just shows how much work Cheetah Conservation Botswana has put into them and their community.

Cheetah Brothers: Cheetah Conservation Botswana

Posted by in Africa,Carnivores,community-based conservation,Endangered Species

Early June 1010:

The two orphaned cheetah cubs being cared for at CCB’s Western Kalahari camp in Ghanzi have been successfully moved to their new home in the Selinda Reserve in Northern Botswana. The two cubs named Tlotlo (Respect) and Kgotso (Peace) came to CCB when they were 6 months old. The cubs had been caught by a community in Southern Botswana and whilst efforts were made to locate their mother, they were not successful. So the brothers moved to the CCB Ghanzi camp in March 2009 and have since been raised with minimal human contact, preparing them for eventual release into the wild.

Last week, the two brothers had medical health checks and were fitted with satellite navigation GPS collars. The collars will enable us to keep track of their progress once released. The CCB team and the young cheetahs then made the 600km journey from Ghanzi to the Selinda Reserve, in Northern Botswana. Their new home is an unfenced 320,000 acre private reserve, abundant with wildlife, including predators such as wild dog and leopard, large herbivores such as elephant and hippo and a wide range of natural prey for the cheetah, such as impala, duiker and hares.

The cheetah behaved extremely well during the journey to Maun by vehicle and then on to Selinda Reserve by light aircraft. Once landed at the dirt airstrip in Selinda, we headed to the 50 acre enclosure set up as their new temporary home. The enclosure allows time for the cheetah to adjust to their new environment, refine hunting techniques and begin to associate the area as their territory. Dr Kyle Good and research assistant Harriet Reeves released the cats next to a natural pan within the enclosure. The brothers exited their boxes calmly and cautiously, as they began to explore their new surroundings. They are now settling in to the temporary enclosure before their final release onto the reserve in a few weeks time. Then for the first time since they were 6 months old they will be able to explore their environment without coming to a fence. However, they will have many obstacles to overcome, including perfecting their hunting abilities and surviving in an area with other predators, but we are confident in their abilities and believe they deserve their chance for freedom. Lorraine Boast, CCB Research Coordinator, will remain at Selinda for several weeks after the release to monitor their progress in their new wilderness home. They will then be monitored by their satellite collars for a further 2 years.

Check back tomorrow for a release update…

One of Houston Zoo's Cheetahs when they were still cubs-2007

Cheetah Conservation Botswana

Posted by in Africa,Carnivores,community-based conservation,Endangered Species,Featured

The Houston Zoo has been  supporting the work of Cheetah Conservation Botswana since 2008, offering funding for operating support and educational programming. Cheetah Conservation Botswana (CCB) aims to preserve the nation’s cheetah population through scientific research, community outreach and education, working with rural communities to promote coexistence with Botswana’s rich diversity of predator species.  

The project was formed in 2003 to address the threat to the nation’s cheetah population. The major challenge for the project, funded by grant aid and donor support, is one of improving community perceptions towards predators and ensuring that retaliatory killings do not continue to threaten cheetah numbers, while, at the same time, supporting and protecting rural community welfare. Your generous support is already helping us to achieve that.

Only by working together with communities who live side-by-side with predators, with initiatives tailored to meet their needs and priorities, do we hope to foster the attitudes of coexistence that will see cheetahs remain as an essential component in this remarkable ecosystem and as a flagship species for the rich biodiversity of Botswana.  

Over the next few days, we thought we would update you on some exciting news surrounding the release of two orphaned cheetahs. The two cubs named Tlotlo (Respect) and Kgotso (Peace) came to CCB when they were 6 months old. The cubs had been caught by a community in Southern Botswana and whilst efforts were made to locate their mother, they were not successful. So the brothers moved to the CCB Ghanzi camp in March 2009 and have since been raised with minimal human contact, preparing them for eventual release into the wild.

Give toads a brake on rainy nights!

Posted by in amphibians,Endangered Species,Texas,What You Can Do

With all the rain and flooding we have gotten over the last couple of days, little toads will make their way out of their hiding places and hop around our neighborhood streets and driveways looking for a nice  puddle or ditch to hunker down and sing their little hearts out to attract lady toads.

You may hear the low trill of Gulf coast toads outside your bedroom window or the quiet chirp of the Rio Grande chirping frog.

Let’s not silence these melodious songs by squashing  them under our monster tires! We need our slimey friends around to munch mosquitos and other pesky insects.

What can you do to help our amphibious friends on rainy nights? Give amphibians a brake! Drive a tad slower and watch out for toads and other amphibians crossing our streets and driveways!

Have you been lucky enough to catch a glimpse of a googly eyed toad in the last day or so? If so, please share!

Below, feast your eyes upon the handsome Houston toad at the Houston Zoo, one of the most endangered amphibians in the world!

The Pasadena Citizen is interested in our Efforts to Save the Philippine Eagle with Plastic Flamingos

Posted by in Endangered Species,What You Can Do

The Houston Zoo has been organizing little surprises for people all over the city.  The Bird department’s “Flamingo Flocking” team, consisting of bird keepers armed with plastic flamingos, is deployed on unsuspecting recipient’s front yards by the resipient’s family members or friends, in the name of conservation and good fun.   This is a fabulous campaign to raise awareness as well as funds for bird conservation.  Read about an experience with this unique activity here in today’s Pasadena Citizen.

Proceeds from the Flamingo Flocking program currently support the The Philippine Eagle Foundation. They are a non-profit organization dedicated to saving the endangered Philippine Eagle (Pithecophaga jefferyi) and its forest habitat. SUPPORT BIRD CONSERVATION and go “FLOCK” someone. E-mail us at flamingoflocking@houstonzoo.org

Lowland Tapir Conservation: Brazil

Posted by in community-based conservation,Endangered Species,South America,Travel,What You Can Do

Photo Patricia Medici

The four living species of tapirs occur in the tropics of Central America (Baird’s tapir), South America (lowland tapir, and mountain tapir), and Southeast Asia (Malayan tapir). The lowland tapir has the broadest range of the four living species extending from north-central Colombia and east of the Andes throughout most of tropical South America down to north eastern Argentina and Paraguay at elevations up to 2,000 masl. The species occurs in 11 different countries including Argentina, Bolivia, Brazil, Colombia, Ecuador, Guyana, French Guyana, Paraguay, Peru, Suriname and Venezuela.

The Lowland Tapir Conservation Initiative
The Atlantic Forest Tapir Program has demonstrated that tapirs are a keystone species that play a critical role in shaping and maintaining biological diversity and forest structure, and are essential for key ecological processes such as seed dispersal and predation. In order to advance scientific knowledge and promote the conservation of this widely spread but seriously imperiled large mammal, Patrícia Medici has now launched a country-wide Lowland Tapir Conservation Initiative that will establish tapir research and conservation programs in other key biomes of Brazil. The first of these is a new Tapir Research and Conservation Program in the Brazilian Pantanal, where no tapir research has ever been conducted. The Pantanal is increasingly threatened. Deforestation is now widespread throughout the region, threatening tapirs and other wildlife with local extinction.

The Pantanal Tapir Program was established in 2008. The study areas of the Pantanal Tapir Program are the Hotel Fazenda Baía das Pedras in the Nhecolândia sub-region of the Pantanal, and the Pousada Xaraés and Fazenda Nossa Senhora do Carmo in the Abobral sub-region. The main goals of this new long-term program are to collect ecological, demographic, epidemiological and genetic data to assess the conservation status and viability of tapir populations in the Brazilian Pantanal.

Link here for more on Tapir Conservation on the Blog da Anta website

You can travel to the Pantanal with the Houston Zoo and visit with the Pantanal Tapir Program in August 2011. Just link here for an itinerary.

Giant Anteater-Pantanal Tour 2009

Baby Elephant Rescue in Hwange National Park

Posted by in Africa,community-based conservation,Elephant

Here is a different type of baby elephant video.  My friends at Painted Dog Conservation in Zimbabwe spend a lot of their time following packs of African Wild Dogs through Hwange nation park .  Occasionally, they find  injured animals needing their assistance along the way.  They often help animals with snare (wire trap) wounds that need to be treated.   One afternoon Jealous (this is actually his name, native Zimbabwean parents name children after English words they have heard or seen, but don’t understand what they mean.  His name does not describe his nature.), PDC’s head tracker, found a baby elephant trapped upside down in a water trough and called Peter Blinston, PDC’s project manager, to assist in a rescue.  Watch the heroic rescue below.

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