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[Free Report October]: Snow Leopard in Nepal |
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by Nishan kc | 01-11-2020 01:04
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SNOW LEOPARD IN NEPAL The snow leopard (Panthera uncia) is a highly elusive cat and an apex predator native to high mountains of Central and South Asia. The species inhabits an estimated area of 1.8 million km square at an altitude from 540m to more than 5000m (GSLEP 2013). They occur in 12 countries: Afghanistan, Bhutan, China, India, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Mongolia, Nepal, Pakistan, Russia, Tajikistan, and Uzbekistan, and its current estimated population range from 3921 to 6290 (GSLEP 2013). Nepal, also a home for snow leopard among the list of 12 countries having an estimated population of 350-500 snow leopards (DNPWC 2017). In Nepal, potential snow leopard habitat is estimated to be about 13,000 km square, with a wider distribution outside the protected area (WWF 2009). Annapurna Conservation Area, Shey Phuksundo National Park, Kangchenjunga Conservation Area, Manaslu Conservation Area, and Sagarmatha National Park are the prime protected areas for the snow leopard in Nepal. Apart from these protected areas, a healthy number of snow leopard expected to occur in the Mugu, Dolpa, and Humla districts of Nepal. Primarily, snow leopards in Nepal share their habitat with blue sheep, Himalayan tahr, alpine musk deer, Tibetan argali, Himalayan wolf, and barking deer. Nepal has given its persistent efforts on research and conservation of snow leopard. Major research of snow leopard in Nepal uses cutting-edge methods like non-invasive genetic analysis of scats, GPS satellite radio-collar, and camera trapping. Community engagement, conservation education in schools, outreach programs, trans-boundary co-operation, compensation scheme, livelihood enhancement, capacity building training to frontline park staffs, the formation of Snow Leopard Conservation Committee¡¯s (SLCC), and introduction of citizen scientists are the key conservation works initiated in many principle habitats (DNPWC 2017). Despite the above-mentioned research and conservation efforts, there are still few challenges for snow leopard conservation in Nepal. Major prey species of snow leopard are depleting because of overgrazing of rangelands, livestock herding, and overexploitation of medicinal herbs. Due to a shortage of natural prey, snow leopard mostly prey on domestic livestock (Chetri et al. 2017) which leads to retaliatory killings (in an act of revenge) and persecution. The potential habitats of the snow leopard and its prey species are supposed to decline because of the adverse effects of climate change (Aryal et al. 2016). Illegal poaching and trade of snow leopard¡¯s body parts are also one of the key drivers for its population decline across many habitat ranges. The snow leopard is Vulnerable in IUCN (International Union for Conservation of Nature) Red List , under appendix I in CITIES (The Convection on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora) which strictly bans all the International trade of specimens of the species and protected species in Nepal. For the viability of the species, a holistic approach and multi-pronged strategies should be strengthened across all the potential ranges. References: ¨ª Aryal A, Shrestha UB, Ji W, Ale SB, Shrestha S, Ingty T, Maraseni T, Cockfield G, Raubenheimer D (2016) Predicting the distributions of predator (snow leopard) and prey (blue sheep) under climate change in the Himalaya. Ecol Evol 6: 4065– 4075. https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.2196 ¨ª Chetri M, Odden M, Wegge P (2017) Snow Leopard and Himalayan Wolf: Food Habits and Prey Selection in the Central Himalayas, Nepal. PLoS ONE 12(2): e0170549. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0170549 ¨ª DNPWC (2017) Snow Leopard Conservation Action Plan (2017-2021). Department of National Parks and Wildlife Conservation, Kathmandu, Nepal WWF (2009) Estimating snow leopard populations in the Nepal Himalaya Pp 1-31 Photo Credit: Gettyimages |
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6 Comments
Hello Nishan!
It's your SJ mentor.
Thank you for sharing your wonderful report regarding the snow leopard in Nepal.
I am not accustomed to snow leopard because living in middle altitude.
By reading your report I could learn about the nature of snow leopard.
It is great to get to know research and conservation efforts in Nepal.
Integrative program containing not only leopards but its preys are needed.
Hope things are fine with you.
Keep writing!
Best regards,
SJ mentor.
Posted 11-11-2020 17:38
Hello Nishan,
this is your mentor WooJoo.
Warm greetings from South Korea.
Thanks to your report I was able to know many interesting facts and issues related to snow leopards, which is kind of an unfamiliar animal to me.
In South Korea, there are no snow leopards, so I feel it is amazing how Nepal has so many of them, and it is putting a lot of efforts for protection.
Climate change is playing a major role in destroying the food chain of wildlife.
Illegal poaching must vanish, and it seems that the leopards need a solution for food supply.
Thank you for sharing such an informative report.
Regards,
Woojoo
Posted 05-11-2020 21:12
Greetings Ida
I hope you are doing well
Very impressive and well written report
Thank you so much for this report
Keep writing
Green cheers
Regards
Asmita Gaire
Posted 03-11-2020 12:23
Thanks for sharing. So interesting, I have never seen this animal, but I really want)
Posted 03-11-2020 04:15
Hello Nishan Dai
Thank you for sharing information relating to snow leopard.
In our country retaliation of human towards snowleopard become major reason of extinction.
Regards
Dolma
Posted 02-11-2020 20:34
Hello Nishan
Thank you so much for such an informative report
Keep sharing
warm regards
Shobha
Posted 01-11-2020 12:45