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Cat Rehabilitation, Emdoneni News

Release of two Servals

Emdoneni Cheetah Project The Emdoneni Cheetah Project is a unique project in Zululand, a project that is not focused on the quantity of cats held, but on the quality of existence for the few cats we have and giving their offspring the opportunity to be rewilded and to live a free life back in their natural environment, caring and hunting for themselves. In South Africa there are very few institutions of this nature that are willing to depart with their cats without being remunerated for them. Emdoneni‘s policy has always been not to sell any of our cats and that the aim of the project is to rehabilitate areas in Zululand and other areas that these cats were previously indigenous too, but became extinct. Up to date, 17 serval cats has found their home back into the wild from Emdoneni, our first cheetah is in the process of being rewilded and was donated to Gondwana Game Reserve in the Cape. This cat’s market value is around R130 000 today, but we chose to release her free of charge, as this is what we stand for. In addition, 11 caracal and 2 African Wild Cats has also been released in back into the wild on various private game reserves in Zululand. Rewilding is a slow process, after the kittens are born, the mother has to raise them for almost 8 months and then they will stay at the project until about 14 months, until they are capable of being released. To put this in prospective for people to understand, these specific cat’s food, veterinary cost, camps, water supply, etc. until the day they are released, are fitted by the project. The reasoning behind doing 2 daily tours at the project is to raise funds so that the project can be self-funded. Many people visiting the project do not see or realise the work and efforts to run a project like this and the financial implications to do so. We have never had one negative comment about or animal husbandry and over the last year have improved the projects facilities, for example size and quality of camps, veterinary rooms, new freezer room and food preparation facilities, etc. This is all funded by visitors, including the running cost of food, salaries, veterinary bills, etc. We are about to release two more serval cats that was born at the project on the Isimangaliso Wetland Park on the 4th of April 2017 and two African Wild Cats on a private game ranch north of Hluhluwe. This is our ultimate goal and satisfaction when those boxes are opened and to see them disappear in the long grass. We see the guided tours as a necessity to keep the project alive, as other institutions rely on donations and others rely on the sale of their offspring to fund their projects, not mentioning animals that are being bred for hunting purposes.                                  

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Cat Information, Cat Rehabilitation

Cheetah Matchmaking: Helping Big Cats Find a Mate

You may not have had “cheetah matchmaker” featured at your high school career fair, but that’s just what Vincent van der Merwe’s business card may as well read. But trying to repopulate the highly vulnerable species can be as dangerous as it is exciting. Watch the video to see what happens when van der Merwe tries to translocate a very unhappy cheetah across South Africa. The relocation work depicted in this video is a partnership between the Endangered Wildlife Trust and African Parks Network, with funding provided in part by the National Geographic Society. In the last hundred years, Africa’s human population has increased twentyfold, pushing cheetahs out of 91 percent of their historic range. Today around 7,100 cheetah live in the wild, according to a recent study in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. That’s down from an estimated 14,000 cheetah in 1975. (Read “Cheetahs Are Dangerously Close to Extinction.”) The big cats once roamed nearly all of Africa and much of Asia, but their population is now confined predominantly to three African countries: Namibia, Botswana, and South Africa. The species is already almost extinct in Asia, with fewer than 50 individuals remaining in one isolated pocket of Iran. National Geographic caught up with Vincent van der Merwe, a National Geographic Big Cats Initiative grantee and conservation biologist, to learn more about his work as a big cat Cupid. Q. What’s the current state of cheetah conservation in South Africa? South Africa is Africa’s most developed country, so it’s particularly difficult for cheetah to traverse the landscape and long gone are the wide, open spaces for cheetah to roam freely. All that we are left with are fragments of natural habitat. What we have done with our few remaining wildlife reserves is fenced them, so we have to swap individuals between these reserves to maintain genetic integrity and prevent inbreeding. And South Africa is the only country, worldwide, where we’ve actually seen an increase in wild cheetah numbers. One of the biggest and most successful conservation operations in Africa is the non-profit African Parks Network (APN). They manage 10 large reserves in 7 countries across Africa, and they’ve essentially created safe space for a myriad of species over 600,000 hectares of land. These are the real heroes of conservation. So it’s really great to be working with APN and reintroducing species into their reserves. Vincent works with a team to translocate this cheetah to a new protected reserve. What are some of the advantages and disadvantages of the fencing approach? The disadvantage is that you’re limiting gene flow, so there is potential for inbreeding. The advantages are that you limit human movement into reserves, you cut down poaching, you cut down snaring, and effectively create safe space for cheetahs. Fencing plays the crucial role of creating safe space for wildlife. This approach is undoubtedly working, and our numbers in South Africa are up to about 1,200 cheetah, the third largest population worldwide. How do you match up potential cheetah mates? I manage a studbook for [330] cheetah in 53 different reserves across the country as part of the EWT’s Carnivore Conservation Programme. I effectively identify which cheetah are related to each other and we prevent putting those cheetah onto the same reserves. It’s “human mediated gene flow,” which sounds very sexy, but it’s actually just a case of conservationists loading cheetah onto their vehicle and driving them to a new reserve to promote gene flow. What are some of the risks that the cheetahs face during the immobilization and transportation process? It’s an incredibly stressful experience for these wide ranging animals to be put into these small, confined spaces for up to a 20-hour drive. The cheetah are at risk of heat exhaustion, pneumonia, or capture myopathy, which is a buildup of lactic acid in the body due to stress. We’ve also learned that cheetah that come from reserves that don’t have lion—we call these “lion-naïve” cheetah—do not perform very well when you move them onto reserves with lion. Cheetah need to be lion-savvy, they also need to be leopard and hyena-savvy. You cannot take a cheetah from a predator-free environment and try and put them into a fenced area with a high density of predators. Those animals simply do not compete very well. Also, cheetah need a short period of time to acclimatize to their new environment. When we bring cheetah to new reserves, we put them into an enclosure called a “boma” for six weeks to three months. It allows the cheetah to realize what other large predators are present and most importantly, it kills their homing instinct. As with any cat species, they have an extinct to go back to where they originally came from. In one case we had a cheetah that walked over 300 kilometers back to its reserve of origin. A cheetah acclimates to his temporary enclosure, or boma, before being released back into the wild. What happens after they’re released from the boma and onto the reserve? The favorite part of my job is definitely, without a doubt, getting to that stage where you open up the boma gate and let that animal go, and be a cheetah, do what a normal cheetah does, and watching it run off into the bush, and to have access to wide, open spaces again, and to do what cheetah normally do. That’s an incredibly rewarding and enriching experience. We do carefully monitor them for two to three weeks post-release, just to make sure that they are hunting and avoiding the other predators successfully. If they’re not hunting successfully, there is a little bit of supplementary feedings. We’ll go and drop an impala carcass for them or a warthog carcass just to give them that little bit more energy to push them to hunt successfully and naturally. Normally they catch onto it in about one or two weeks. In some cases, we’ve had cheetah catching prey just five minutes after release. A cheetah relaxes on one of the reserves. As a scientist you need to be objective, but is there any sort of personal connection? What’s that balance like for you? When you actively

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Cat Information

Cheetahs are experiencing alarming declines and should be listed as endangered, scientists say

Ceetahs may have once prospered, but they certainly aren’t anymore. Scientists examining the worldwide population of these swift, spotted cats have found that there are only 7,100 left in the wild, surviving on just 9% of their original land range — and that they should be upgraded from “vulnerable” to “endangered” on the International Union for the Conservation of Nature’s Red List of Threatened Species. The grim findings, published in PNAS, show that studying cheetahs in protected areas may make the species’ status look rosier than reality — and that conservationists may need to switch tactics if they want to prevent cheetahs and other threatened species from going extinct. As humans have spread across every continent on Earth, it has often bode ill for nearby populations of large mammals. Tens of thousands of years ago, mammoths, saber-toothed cats and giant ground sloths roamed California — but these and other charismatic megafauna dwindled and went extinct around the same time that humans arrived on the scene. (Scientists are still studying whether humans, climate change or both helped lead to these species’ extinction.) “The spread and dominance of humans across the world during the Anthropocene have precipitated a sixth global biodiversity extinction crisis,” the study authors wrote. The Anthropocene is the term used for the Earth’s current geological age — the chapter of its history in which human activity has profoundly affected the environment and global climate. One place where that effect is highly noticeable is in today’s extinction rate: The industrialization and spread of human civilization in recent times has accelerated the decline of much of the world’s iconic wildlife, be they giraffes, rhinoceroses, elephants or lions, among many others. Large land-based mammals, the authors wrote, “can be especially vulnerable to anthropogenic impacts, such as habitat loss and fragmentation, human-wildlife conflict, illegal wildlife trade, and overharvesting for bushmeat or traditional use.” Cheetahs, as it turns out, are no exception to that trend of decline. Known formally as Acinonyx jubatus, cheetahs today survive on only 9% of their past distributional range, according to the study authors. That’s a big deal for large carnivores —particularly for cheetahs, who need a lot of space. Their home ranges can exceed 3,000 square kilometers. As they have for other species, scientists, government officials and conservationists have worked to create protected areas to shelter these shrinking populations against poaching and deadly confrontations with farmers and other humans, among other risks. But population estimates based on protected areas don’t tell the whole story, since wild animals don’t stay within these human-defined boundaries, the authors pointed out. And those inaccuracies are especially problematic for large mammals, because while cheetah populations might look OK within those well-patrolled areas, the dangers immediately increase for any populations living outside of those zones. “Wildlife management authorities may be required to monitor wildlife within PAs [protected areas] but not outside them, and monitoring is usually more challenging outside PAs, because wildlife are more elusive and occur there at lower densities,” the study authors wrote. “This deficit leads to a lack of information on populations outside PAs, where they are generally more threatened, resulting in an overly favorable assessment of status.” So for this paper, Sarah Durant of the Zoological Society of London and her international team of colleagues put together a comprehensive data set of cheetahs’ distribution and status, hoping to get a clearer picture about how cheetahs were really doing. The findings were sobering. There appear to be only about 7,100 adult and adolescent cheetahs left in the wild, restricted to less than a tenth of their original range. On top of that, a full 77% of their current range actually falls outside of protected areas, which means the vast majority of the cheetahs’ range exposes them to a host of threats, from hunting or trafficking by humans to conflict and competition with humans. “Establishing and maintaining protected areas [PAs] are key tools for biodiversity conservation,” the study authors pointed out. “However, this approach is insufficient for many species, particularly those that are wide-ranging and sparse.” The scientists recommended that cheetahs be raised from “vulnerable” to “endangered” on the International Union for the Conservation of Nature’s Red List. In the meantime, conservationists, scientists and policymakers may have to shift their focus toward making those unprotected areas safer places for cheetahs to survive, rather than focusing all their efforts on the protected zones. “For this shift to occur, new policy, management, and financial tools are needed that promote coexistence between people and wildlife outside and adjacent to PAs,” the authors wrote. “This innovation will require concerted action from governments and effective cross-sectoral engagement across the conservation and economic development communities.” Doing so could provide a model for dealing with other threatened species — although getting there will present a new and complicated set of challenges, the scientists said. “Securing sustainable solutions for wildlife and people will not be easy, particularly where threatened species may share their range with marginalized and vulnerable communities and where human development challenges are substantial,” the authors wrote. “However, unless this transformation is achieved, the future of wide-ranging and highly threatened species, such as cheetah, is in doubt.”  

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General News

Newly developed camera system to aid the EWT in the prevention of power line collisions

The EWT recently took another important step towards minimising the impact of power lines on birds. As part of a long-term strategic partnership with Eskom, two specially designed cameras were fitted to a stretch of power line in De Aar located in the Northern Cape Province of South Africa, with the aim of better understanding, and therefore minimising the threats to birds from energy infrastructure. The Bird Detection System (BDS) is a South African-designed concept that uses a high-resolution camera with image processing capabilities to detect movement, including birds, in the frame. It was designed when the EWT expressed a need for an affordable, versatile product that would assist in the research of bird collisions. After three years of hard work, dedication and testing, the product was ready to be trialled out in the field. The BDS, which is solar powered, is the first real-time system to transmit data such as video clips or photos directly to a user’s cell phone or data bank, with information uploaded straight to a cloud server for easy retrieval. This enables team members to count birds, identify species, and observe behaviour. The software and settings can also be configured remotely, eliminating the need for field maintenance, while the camera has an hourly self-check system and reboots every 24 hours. The BDS is fully adaptable to user requirements, and can also be used during Environmental Impact Assessments as a tool for specialists conducting surveys. Eight years of research have shown that the installation location in De Aar is the most impacted by bird mortalities, making it an ideal site for this trial. The EWT Wildlife and Energy Programme Manager, Constant Hoogstad, says, “This device will enable us to gather information about the time of day or night these collisions occur, what the weather conditions are like at the time, and the behaviour of the bird right before colliding with a power line. This will give us far greater insight into what causes these collisions and allow us to find more effective ways to reduce them.” Contacts Constant Hoogstad Manager: Wildlife and Energy Programme Endangered Wildlife Trust Tel: +27 87 021 0398 constanth@ewt.org.za Belinda Glenn Communication and Brand Manager Endangered Wildlife Trust Tel: +27 87 021 0398 belindag@ewt.org.za Source: endangeredwildlifetrust

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Emdoneni News

Special offer now for all Zululanders!

Did you ever want to visit the project and never had the time..? Special offer now for all Zululanders!! *Less 50% on cat tours for everyone in Zululand, children u/12 pay half price! Thus R120 per person and R60 per child. Tour times 10h30 and 16h30 daily. *3 hour early morning game drives to Hluhluwe Game Reserve, min 4 pax on vehicle – R385,00 per person. *Want to stay a bit longer… book a breakfast and/or lunch and spoil yourself with a spa treatment. Less 20% on all spa treatments! A typical day tour would look like this: • Meet and greet at the lodge at 05:30 • Depart for early morning game drive at 05:40 • Arrive at lodge for breakfast 09:30 • Cat tour at 10:30 • Spa treatments at your own leisure • Lunch • Depart Bookings are essential – please phone 035 562 7000/1 or office@emdonenilodge.com Valid for all days; except for Mondays until the end of May 2017 Tour prices are net and non-commissionable T’s & C’s apply  

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