RHINO RECOVERED FROM WANDERLUST


Environmental Panorama
International
October of 2008


13 Oct 2008 - Assam, India: A young rhino that went on a 14-day trek across India, through villages as well as countryside, was finally persuaded to abandon its wanderlust by conservation specialists and return to where its journey began.

The five-year-old rhino, one of the two relocated earlier this year to Assam world heritage site Manas National Park had strayed as far as 68 kilometres away to Kalseni in Guwahati.

The animal had to be tranquilised and put back to its natural habitat before it could be harmed by curious onlookers and poachers. It is believed it was trying to find its way to its previous home in Pobitora wildlife sanctuary.

"The rhino was being tracked all the while with the help of the signals transmitted from his radio collar," said Sujoy Banerjee, Species Conservation Programme Director for WWF-India.

He said the radio signals were superimposed on a map of the area using global positioning system to pinpoint his exact location.

All through its journey the rhino had many curious onlookers, eager to catch a glimpse of it while some even wanted to touch its sacred horn. Others asked WWF personnel for its hair or a piece of its skin, both of which have religious significance in the region.

Not even its dung was left undisturbed! Since it is considered auspicious to keep rhino dung in the granaries, its dung just vanished.

Officials suspect that the animal might again go on a similar "adventure" and move eastward towards Pobitora wildlife sanctuary.

"There is sufficient food for the animal in the Manas park but still the rhino has been attempting to move out of the area,” Banerjee said.

The return of rhinos to Manas this year was an emotional moment for local residents, who lost their last rhinos a decade ago during a 20-year period of civil disturbance that wrecked infrastructure in the famed National Park and allowed poachers free reign.

Officials at the park have been asked to keep a constant vigil on the two male rhinos to ensure they settle down well in the region as it would take some time to subside the "homing instinct" in the animals, which were translocated under the Indian Rhino Vision 2020 programme.

As part of this ambitious project, the Assam government and conservation groups including WWF-India are working to translocate up to 20 rhinos to the park over the years from their homes in both Kaziranga National Park and Pobitora Wildlife Sanctuary.

+ More

Bulgarians eye Black Sea development with concern

13 Oct 2008 - Sofia, Bulgaria: Eighty per cent of the Bulgarian population has expressed concern at the over-construction along its Black Sea coast.

A survey of public opinion conducted by WWF-Bulgaria and Alpha Research also showed that three in four Bulgarians did not approve of the construction of new hotels, ski routes and facilities in the protected areas in the Bulgarian mountains.

The survey was conducted between August 27 and September 3 2008, with 1000 Bulgarians polled.

Questioned whether the government was doing enough to protect and manage the Bulgarian forests, 77.3 per cent answered no and just 2.8 per cent yes.

Asked whether they considered that the felling of forests near riverbeds would decrease the risk of flooding, 45.5 per cent answered negatively and 17.1 per cent answered yes. Flooding rivers became a serious problem in Bulgaria after heavy rainfalls in each of the past three years.

“This survey shows that Bulgarian society has become more and more intolerable towards the government's negligence of the environment,” said Vesselina Kavrakova, programming director at WWF-Bulgaria.

“In 2006 only 51.5 per cent of people disapproved of the building of new hotels, ski tracks and sports utilities in the protected areas. Now the percentage is 71.5. Around 77.3 per cent also think the state is not efficient enough in preserving Bulgaria's nature.”

The five main problems of the country according to respondents are the felling of forests, illegal construction, littering with refuse, the over-construction of mountains and the Black Sea, and the lack of Government control.

More than the half of the respondents did not approve the exchanges of state forests for private lands, which in a wide array of cases has been carried out to the detriment of the state.

The least serious threats to Bulgaria's environment were said to be nuclear power stations, quarrying gravel from riverbeds and pollution by the chemical industry.

 
 

Source: WWF – World Wildlife Foundation International
Press consultantship
All rights reserved

 
 
 
 

 

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