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Environment News
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Sunday, 19 March 2006 01:42 |
WWF Ulaanbaatar, Mongolia – The World Wildlife Fund for nature reports that one of their anti-poaching units in western Mongolia arrested a man for possession of four snow leopard skins, three of which were still wet from recent kills.
“There is an illegal trade network of leopard skins here in Mongolia,” said Yo Onon, a species officer with the WWF Mongolia Programme Office. “We are trying to put a stop to this illegal trade.”
The threats facing snow leopards include habitat fragmentation and uncontrolled hunting, especially as demand for their pelts and other body parts is high. Although it is difficult to assess the present-day scale of trade, snow leopard hunting has been reported from most central Asian range States and the Russian Federation since political and economic instability was ushered in by the dissolution of the Soviet Union at the beginning of the 1990s.
According to WWF in 2004, two people were found in Mongolia selling 17 snow leopard skins across the border with Kazakhstan. According to WWF, 5–7 snow leopard skins are sold annually in Mongolia's western provinces in the Altai-Sayan ecoregion.
“The transboudary trade of snow leopard skins is relatively easy as there are poor customs and border checks,” Onon added.
Although protected under national and international law, the snow leopard (Uncia uncia) remains a highly endangered species, with only about 4,500–7,350 found throughout a range of 12 countries – Afghanistan, Bhutan, China, India, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Mongolia, Nepal, Pakistan, the Russian Federation, Tajikistan and Uzbekistan. The population in Mongolia is estimated at 1,000–1,500.
WWF started to work in Mongolia in 1992 and has since then expanded its scope of operations. In species conservation their focus is on: Snow leopard, Argali, Przewalski horse, Saiga, Dalmatian Pelican, and Relict gull as well as Taimen, Saker Falcon and Musk deer for Altai Sayan region.
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Last Updated on Sunday, 19 March 2006 01:54 |
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