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![]() by AFP Staff Writers Kathmandu (AFP) Dec 6, 2021
Nepal started counting endangered Royal Bengal tigers in its vast forested southern plains, officials said Monday, as conservationists help the big cats claw their way back from near extinction. Deforestation, habitat encroachment and poaching have devastated tiger populations across Asia, but Nepal and 12 other countries signed a pledge in 2010 to double their numbers by next year. Technicians on Sunday began installing cameras in Chitwan National Park, the country's biggest tiger conservation area, with wildlife experts to identify individual animals by their unique stripes. Nearly 4,000 motion-sensitive cameras will eventually be set up across more than 12,000 square kilometres (4,600 square miles) of protected areas and adjoining forests. "The survey is aimed at getting information on the status of tigers which will help us to assess whether our strategies on safeguarding the tiger population have worked," Bed Kumar Dhakal of the National Parks and Wildlife Conservation Department told AFP. The 2010 Tiger Conservation Plan signed by Nepal is backed by celebrities including Leonardo DiCaprio. The world's wild tiger population rose to 3,890 in 2016, according to the World Wide Fund for Nature (WWF) and the Global Tiger Forum. It was the first increase in more than a century and up from an all-time low of 3,200 at the start of that decade. Nepal had 235 tigers in 2018, according to a survey, up nearly double from nine years earlier. The results of the census are expected in July.
![]() ![]() Satellites reveal Ethiopian elephants under threat Oxford UK (SPX) Dec 02, 2021 Tens of thousands of illegal human settlements pose a real threat to the continued existence of an endangered elephant population, according to satellite analysis of the Babile Elephant Sanctuary in eastern Ethiopia by University of Oxford researchers and the Born Free Foundation. Researchers from Oxford's School of Geography and the Environment and Born Free found, in the 11 years to 2017, the number of illegal houses in the sanctuary soared from 18,000 to more than 50,000. Of these, some 32,000 ... read more
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