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FLORA AND FAUNA
UNDP and Iran team to save Asiatic cheetah
by Brooks Hays
Tehran (UPI) Jun 26, 2013


Recovery gets wood stork off endangered species list
Townsend, Ga. (UPI) Jun 27, 2013 - After 30 years on the endangered species list, the American wood stork is getting a status upgrade. On a visit to Harris Neck National Wildlife Refuge along the Georgia coast, Interior Secretary Sally Jewell announced the bird would now be considered only "threatened."

"It's a day for good news about an iconic bird from the Southeast that is doing a great job of recovering," Jewell said, though she cautioned: "There's still important work to do before we can propose to remove it from the list altogether."

In the early 1980s, before the species was federally protected, the bald wading bird that enjoys the marshes from Florida to North Carolina was predicted to go extinct within a decade. But a strong conservation effort on the part of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service has helped the population recover.

In 1981, the South Carolina Department of Natural Resources counted just 11 nests in a statewide survey. Last year, wildlife officials tallied some 2,020 nests.

"One reason we're able to change their status is that the risk has been reduced because their numbers are more spread out," explained Billy Brooks, an FWS biologist managing the stork recovery program. "They have improved their productivity by expanding their breeding range."

Homeowner associations in Florida are happy about the news; for several years they've been arguing that the regulations are unnecessarily stern and prevent new construction.

Others aren't so sure.

"We believe the Fish and Wildlife Service is really premature in any reclassification," said Brad Cornell, an advocate with the Audubon Society. "There are too many gaps in the vital science on wood storks and a lack of long-term habitat protections to sustain its recovery."

But the FWS says legal protections are almost identical for threatened and endangered species.

Iranian environmental officials are working with the United Nations to help save the Asiatic cheetah.

Though they once roamed much of the Middle East and Asia, there are now only approximately 50 Asiatic cheetahs, all confined the northeast regions of Iran.

That's why the U.N. Development Program has begun working with Iran's Department of Environment to raise awareness of the cheetah's plight and encourage citizens to do their part in protecting the endangered species.

To take on the task of protecting the cheetah, a cousin to the more famous African cheetah, Iran and the UNDP created a project called Conservation of Asiatic Cheetah.

Because the cheetahs occasionally come into contact with Iran's farmers, who graze their sheep on habitat shared with the cheetahs, members of CACP are working to ensure both grazing and environmental protection laws are properly enforced. They're also training local villages on how to deal with encroaching cheetahs, so that revenge will not be the first choice should the predators take a sheep or goat from a local farmer. Farmers who lose livestock will be compensated by the new coalition.

UNDP has paid to outfit Iranian park rangers with night vision goggles to help track the cheetah population, and many of the cheetahs have been tagged with GPS collars.

Maybe most important is the publicity. The UNDP and CACP need the support of the public to successfully protect the cheetah, and have thus created a number of public service announcements.

"Our goal with the production of these PSAs is to capture the hearts of the people and make them realize that they too have a responsibility in the conservation of the Asiatic Cheetah," said Iran's Deputy of Natural Resources and Biodiversity Dr. Ahmad-Ali Keykhah. "The species -- in my opinion -- is the wealth of our nation and we, together, need to do everything in our power to reverse its destiny."

The cheetahs are also known as "hunting leopards," as they were once trained for the emperors and kings of Iran and India to hunt gazelles. The cheetahs have been missing from India and several other neighbors of Iran since the middle of the 20th century.

Earlier this year, Iran's national team did their part in raising awareness, sporting jerseys with an image of the beleaguered yet powerful creature.

New mouse species discovered in Namibia
Windhoek, Namibia (UPI) Jun 27, 2013 -Like many of its brethren, a newly discovered elephant shrew species has a protruding snout that vaguely resembles the trunk of an elephant. But the species doesn't just look like an elephant, it shares genes with an elephant.

The discovery of the new elephant shrew -- a group of mice known in Africa by their Bantu-derived name sengi -- began a few years ago when researchers at the California Academy of Sciences noticed the specimens they'd collected in the remote northwestern region of Namibia didn't look like any of the sengis in the museum collections they'd studied.

To confirm their shrewd suspicions that they'd discovered a new type of sengi, the researchers returned to the same region of Namibia several times from 2005-2011 and collected 16 more specimens.

Their perseverance paid off. Genetic analysis revealed a new sengi species, Macroscelides micus, the Etendeka round-eared sengi -- unlike any of the other 19 previously discovered sengis in southwestern Africa.

"Had our colleagues not collected those first invaluable specimens, we would never have realized that this was in fact a new species, since the differences between this and all other known species are very subtle," said Jack Dumbacher, a researcher at the Academy's Curator of Ornithology and Mammalogy.

Dumbacher also credited the rich natural history collections at museums in Windhoek, Pretoria, London, Los Angeles, and the Academy in San Francisco.

"Collections were instrumental in determining that what we had was truly new to science, highlighting the value of collections for this type of work," he added. "It's exciting to think that there are still areas of the world where even the mammal fauna is unknown and waiting to be explored."

The genetic analysis confirmed a news species; it also confirmed that Macroscelides micus, like all elephant shrews, is more closely related to elephants, sea cows, and aardvarks than they are to shrews.

The researchers' shrew discovery was detailed in the latest edition of the Journal of Mammalogy this week.

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