Thursday, February 11, 2010

Wild Cat Conservation

As with many animals in the world today, many if not all of the wild cats species face the possibility of extinction. For some - the Tiger, Spanish Lynx and Snow Leopard - the threat is so serious that it is probable that these animals will in fact disappear from their natural habitat if the present decline in numbers is not halted. Nature can no longer stop their demise - only mans intervention with applied conservation programmes can hope to save these animals.

In a time that now seems to be vanishing into the shadows of history, there was once an abundance of wild cats of every species - it has been estimated that at the turn of the century there were well in excess of 100,000 tigers alone - roaming the our planet. Today these numbers are dwindling fast - of the same tiger, now only 5,000 to 6,000 thousand are left - and their fate along with many of the other wild cats is now extremely uncertain. What is all the more sad is that there extinction will not have been a natural one - countless millions of species have come and gone over the millennia through natural selection and the changing natural world - but the depletion of worlds wild cat species has not been a natural one. It is man who has been responsible, knowingly or not, for the plight of these wild animals.

Through over hunting - either for pleasure or to supply the world trade in fur, the wild cat species have been relentlessly pursued. Today in China and the Far East there is still a market for not only the skins but also the organs and bones of the tiger and leopard - ironically one of the main uses is in medicinal potions which are said to aid longevity and vitality.

As mans population grows - so it spreads ever outward into the natural habitat of the wild cats - forests are cleared and the feeding ground of many of the wild cats natural prey are destroyed - as a result in many of these areas wild cats are often pursued as predators of domestic animals and in some cases labeled as a danger to man himself.

As much as man has been responsible for the wild cats demise, so today, is he responsible for their future. Across the world conservationists and environmental organizations are actively attempting to halt the species extinction. International pressure has been bought to bare and many governments have entered into international agreements to ban the pursuit and continued depletion of the worlds endangered and threatened species. In many of the wild cats native countries, governments, aided by various independent organizations, have set up conservation programmes and reserves to help support the preservation of many species.

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