La vida y su conservación

Las especies son esenciales en el funcionamiento de la vida en nuestra casa que es nuestro planeta; por eso, es importante conservarlas.
Con este objetivo, tenemos que saber cómo son, cómo se organizan en comunidades y cómo interactúan en los sistemas ecológicos.
En el último siglo XX, hemos visto degradaciones ambientales enormes: muchas especies en extinción o en drástica reducción de sus poblaciones, la destrucción o alteración rápida de sus ecosistemas y cambios nunca vistos en el clima del planeta. Esta gran crisis ambiental ha coincido con la disminución de las ciencias naturales en los centros académicos de referencia.

viernes, 15 de abril de 2016

Offspring for Sumatran rhinos (Dicerorhinus sumatrensis): Critically Endangered (IUCN) with only 100 individuals


A new study examines the decline of the Sumatran rhino in Borneo. It concludes that the remnant populations of Sumatran rhinos can only be rescued by combining efforts of total protection with stimulation of breeding activity. The researchers suggest to resettle small isolated populations and to undertake measures to improve fertility. The case of the recently captured female rhino in Kalimantan, Borneo shows the importance of immediate action. Forschungsverbund Berlin e.V. (FVB)



The Sumatran rhinoceros, also known as hairy rhinoceros or Asian two-horned rhinoceros (Dicerorhinus sumatrensis), is a rare member of the family Rhinocerotidae and one of five extant rhinoceroses. It is the only extant species of the genus Dicerorhinus. It is the smallest rhinoceros, although it is still a large mammal. This rhino stands 112–145 cm high at the shoulder, with a head-and-body length of 2.36–3.18 m  and a tail of 35–70 cm. The weight is reported to range from 500 to 1,000 kg , averaging 700–800 kg, although there is a single record of a 2,000 kg specimen. Like both African species, it has two horns; the larger is the nasal horn, typically 15–25 cm, while the other horn is typically a stub. A coat of reddish-brown hair covers most of the Sumatran rhino's body.


Members of the species once inhabited rainforests, swamps, and cloud forests in India, Bhutan, Bangladesh, Myanmar, Laos, Thailand, Malaysia, Indonesia, and China. In historical times, they lived in southwest China, particularly in Sichuan. They are now critically endangered, with only six substantial populations in the wild: four on Sumatra, one on Borneo, and one in the Malay Peninsula. Their numbers are difficult to determine because they are solitary animals that are widely scattered across their range, but they are estimated to number fewer than 100. Survival of the Peninsular Malaysia population is in doubt, and one of the Sumatran populations may already be extinct. Total numbers today may be as low as 80. In 2015, researchers announced that the Eastern Sumatran rhinoceros is extinct from north part of Borneo (Sabah, Malaysia).



A new study examines the decline of the Sumatran rhino in Borneo. It concludes that the remnant populations of Sumatran rhinos can only be rescued by combining efforts of total protection with stimulation of breeding activity. The researchers suggest to resettle small isolated populations and to undertake measures to improve fertility. The case of the recently captured female rhino in Kalimantan, Borneo shows the importance of immediate action. The article has been published in the scientific journal Global Ecology and Conservation.



A consortium of international scientists examined the historical development of the Sumatran rhinos in Borneo. Their study identified the low reproduction of females in combination with hunting as the main cause for the current decline of rhinos. "Females do not find a mating partner within the small isolated populations any more," explains Petra Kretzschmar, scientist at the Leibniz Institute for Zoo and Wildlife Research (IZW), "the long non-reproductive periods lead to the development of reproductive tract tumours." Only a combination of intensive protection with improvements of the reproductive performance can save the species from extiction. The researchers recommend resettling populations of less than 15 individuals to highly protected areas. Here, reproductive health should be monitored on a regular basis and individual female fertility (conception) should be optimised by using assisted reproduction techniques.


For their study, the scientists compared historical data with recent developments about the Borneo rhino (Dicerorhinus sumatrensis harrissoni), one of two extant subspecies of the Sumatran rhino. The researchers used mathematical models to reconstruct the decline of the rhino population in the Tabin Wildlife Reserve (TWR) in the Malayan state Sabah of Borneo. A study on habitat use completed the picture. Here, the scientists analysed data collected over a span of 13 years and identified the characteristics describing the preferred habitat of the rhinos.



Today, only two subspecies of the Sumatran rhino exist, D. s. sumatrensis in Sumatra, Indonesia, and D. s. harrissoni, in Borneo in the states of Sabah, Malaysia, and Kalimantan, Indonesia. 

Currently, there are still around 100 individuals in Sumatra but the Sumatran rhino on Borneo is nearly extinct. 

The decline of the rhino population in Sabah has been documented in detail for the first time in this new study. Many animals were still spotted in 2000. By 2013, the scientists did not register a single rhino individual left. One of the last Borneo rhinos has been recently captured in the state of Kalimantan, the southern part of Borneo belonging to Indonesia. "The captured animal was one of the last females of its species" says Kretzschmar of the IZW, "it died right after capture due to an infection of a snare wound."


The reasons for the catastrophic decline of the Sumatran rhinos have not been previously clear. Data necessary to improve decisions for conservation management of the rhinos was missing or fragmentary. The new study closes this gap. It demonstrates that a combination of techniques can do much to illuminate causes of population declines, improve decision making for conservation management and possibly prevent similar developments in populations of other species of similar ecological standing.


The catastrophic decline ofmore species of the big area of South East Asia are in the deforestation, palm oil plantations and poachers.





Presumed Extinct Javan Elephants May Have Been Found Again - In Borneo



The Borneo pygmy elephant may not be native to Borneo after all. Instead, the population could be the last survivors of the Javan elephant race - accidentally saved from extinction by the Sultan of Sulu centuries ago, a new publication suggests. The origins of the pygmy elephants, found in a range extending from the north-east of the island into the Heart of Borneo, have long been shrouded in mystery. Their looks and behavior differ from other Asian elephants and scientists have questioned why they never dispersed to other parts of the island. 



General Information

Population: There is approximately 1,500 pygmy elephants.

Height: Pygmy elephants usually grow to 8.2 - 9.8 feet (average Asian elephants grow to around 13 feet). 

Habitats: Elephants tend to live in grasslands and forests.

Life-span: Elephants normally live for up to 60 years in the wild and more than 80 years in captivity.

Gestation period: Pygmy elephants gestation period is between 19-22 months (almost 2 years!).

Family life: Pygmy elephants are usually led by a female (matriarch) in small groups of about eight, families consist of mothers, daughters, sisters and young males (occasionally an adult male). The adult males usually travel individually. The males sometimes gather in temporary herds. 

Diet: Elephants are forest herbivores. One elephant can eat up to 330 lbs. of vegetation per day. They eat mostly palms grasses and wild bananas. They obtain minerals from salt licks. 

 Color: All elephants usually range from light grey to dark brown.


The Borneo pygmy elephant may not be native to Borneo after all. Instead, the population could be the last survivors of the Javan elephant race – accidentally saved from extinction by the Sultan of Sulu centuries ago, a new publication suggests.


The origins of the pygmy elephants, found in a range extending from the north-east of the island into the Heart of Borneo, have long been shrouded in mystery. Their looks and behaviour differ from other Asian elephants and scientists have questioned why they never dispersed to other parts of the island.


But a new paper published supports a long-held local belief that the elephants were brought to Borneo centuries ago by the Sultan of Sulu, now in the Philippines, and later abandoned in the jungle. 

The Sulu elephants, in turn, are thought to have originated in Java.

 


Javan elephants became extinct some time in the period after Europeans arrived in South-East Asia. Elephants on Sulu, never considered native to the island, were hunted out in the 1800s.


“Elephants were shipped from place to place across Asia many hundreds of years ago, usually as gifts between rulers,” said Mr Shim Phyau Soon, a retired Malaysian forester whose ideas on the origins of the elephants partly inspired the current research. “It’s exciting to consider that the forest-dwelling Borneo elephants may be the last vestiges of a subspecies that went extinct on its native Java Island, in Indonesia, centuries ago.”


If the Borneo pygmy elephants are in fact elephants from Java, an island more than 1,200 km (800 miles) south of their current range, it could be the first known elephant translocation in history that has survived to modern times, providing scientists with critical data from a centuries-long experiment.


Scientists solved part of the mystery in 2003, when DNA testing by Columbia University and WWF ruled out the possibility that the Borneo elephants were from Sumatra or mainland Asia, where the other Asian subspecies are found, leaving either Borneo or Java as the most probable source.

 

The new paper, “Origins of the Elephants Elephas Maximus L. of Borneo,” published in this month’s Sarawak Museum Journal shows that there is no archaeological evidence of a long-term elephant presence on Borneo.


“Just one fertile female and one fertile male elephant, if left undisturbed in enough good habitat, could in theory end up as a population of 2,000 elephants within less than 300 years,” said Junaidi Payne of WWF, one of the paper’s co-authors. “And that may be what happened in practice here.”



There are perhaps just 1,000 of the elephants in the wild, mostly in the Malaysian state of Sabah.

WWF satellite tracking has shown they prefer the same lowland habitat that is being increasingly cleared for timber rubber and palm oil plantations. Their possible origins in Java make them even more a conservation priority.



“If they came from Java, this fascinating story demonstrates the value of efforts to save even small populations of certain species, often thought to be doomed,” said Dr Christy Williams, coordinator of WWF’s Asian elephant and rhino programme. “It gives us the courage to propose such undertakings with the small remaining populations of critically endangered Sumatran rhinos and Javan rhinos, by translocating a few to better habitats to increase their numbers. It has worked for Africa’s southern white rhinos and Indian rhinos, and now we have seen it may have worked for the Javan elephant, too.”




Conservation: Conflict with Humans

The primary threat to these elephants is the loss of continuous forests. Mammals of their size require large areas to find sufficient food. The large blocks of forests they require are fragmented by encroachment and conversion of natural forests to commercial plantations. Logging, expanding agriculture, and palm oil plantations are reducing contact between sub populations, as well as shrinking the forest area available for each sub-population.



Shrinking forests bring the elephants into more frequent contact with people, increasing human -elephant conflict in the region. New oil palm plantations in the area mean more human settlements, with some people setting illegal snares to catch small game. In the Lower Kinabatangan Wildlife Sanctuary, it is estimated that 20% of resident elephants have sustained injuries from these snares.

 The catastrophic decline of more species of the big area of South East Asia are in the deforestation, palm oil plantations and poachers.

jueves, 14 de abril de 2016

The Birding Without Borders Species Contest: Noah Strycker and his international Big Year of 6 042 bird species


Lessons From the World’s Biggest Year





In 2015, I set a new world big year record by seeing 6 042 species of birds, almost 60% of the known bird species on Earth in a continous round-the-world trip, traveling through 41 countries on all seven continents, and flying on about 70 days out of 365. No days off!


Birding Without Borders 

I celebrated the New Year with Cape Petrels in Antarctica, set the world record in India with a pair of Sri Lankan Frogmouths on September 16, and reached the 5 000 species with a Flame-crown Flowerpecker in the Philippines on October 26. 

My final bird of the year, No. 6 042 was an Oriental Bay-Owl near Tinsukia, India, the night ofworld big year record by seeing 6 042 species of birds a new December 31.



By Noah Strycker

Popular Stories
 
Noah Strycker is a writer, photographer, and adventurer. This year, he's embarking on an international Big 


The Birding Without Borders Species Contest




5,000+ Species. 37 Countries. 2 Chances to Win. 

Guess Noah’s species total to win great prizes from Visit Peru, Lowepro, and Joby.



http://www.audubon.org/sites/default/files/styles/engagement_card/public/editorial-card-images/article/sfw_noah_edcard_l1040211.jpg?itok=ERX8Dura
A little more than a year ago, in this magazine, I announced a grand plan to see as many birds as I could in 2015. The playing field: Planet Earth. The goal: 5,000 species. On January 1, 2015, I set out to see the world, one bird at a time.

My mission, besides raw adventure, was to bear witness to the diversity—human and avian—that inhabits our planet. I would tap into the worldwide network of birders, hear their stories, and see their species. Such an undertaking has become possible thanks to the Internet, which has transformed how people interact with nature and one another. What was once seen as a pursuit for first-world retirees has become popular across all kinds of borders—birding has exploded in countries like Brazil, Malaysia, and China. As I moved from place to place in constant pursuit of summer, with only a full backpack, a pair of binoculars, (hosted by Audubon), and a healthy dose of enthusiasm, I began to see what birding means in this new millennium. I never hired an international guide, but I also never went birding alone. Seven continents, 41 countries, and, I had racked up—besting the previous Big Year world record by 1,701 species!

When traveling the world, it pays to tip well, smile always, arrive early, be nice, and carry a spoon in your back pocket (in case a jar of peanut butter turns up). Here are a few other lessons I learned from the biggest Big Year ever.



Along with a limited wardrobe, packed in a single backpack, Strycker brought Leica 10x42 Ultravid HD-Plus bin- oculars; a Leica 65 mm Televid spotting scope with tripod; a Leica V-Lux camera; a GoPro; a MacBook Air; an iPhone 4 (later upgraded to an iPhone 6); an iPod nano; a spotlight; a headlamp; a silk sleeping bag liner; a travel lock; adapters; notebooks; Audubon pins; and various toiletries.

What to Bring

The farther you go, the less you need. For this Big Year, I bought a 40-liter backpack from REI and made some tough choices: Spotting scope or telephoto lens? (I picked the scope.) Deodorant or a third pair of underwear? (I picked the underwear—for better or for worse.) Several times I would have missed flights if I had checked luggage. In Peru I got to the airport 18 minutes before takeoff—and made my flight.

My gear held up remarkably well. Nothing was stolen or lost. The most useful items included a scope, binoculars, and camera from Leica (my sponsor), as well as my MacBook Air laptop and iPhone 6, which were pushed into use every day in rugged conditions and never let me down. Especially practical were a SureFire LED flashlight with rechargeable batteries (for spotlighting nocturnal birds) and a green laser pointer (for pointing out birds in dense forests). Less essential were the portable mosquito net, sleeping bag liner, water purification tablets, and leech socks.

Get Connected

Gmail and Facebook get a lot of credit, but, an online birding database managed by the Cornell Lab of Ornithology and the National Audubon Society, is the birder’s indispensable social network—it currently connects almost 300,000 of us from all over the world. 



Noah breaks the world Big Year record


Phrases like “eBird lifer” and “let’s share a checklist” were part of regular conversations in places like India and Taiwan. When I studied up on birds to prepare for the Big Year, I spent more time looking at eBird data than traditional field guides; it was easy to see what others had recorded in the locations I planned to visit.

Welcome to eBird

Speaking of field guides, I couldn’t fit any in my backpack, so I went digital. Many field guides are now available as apps. For the rest, I scanned pages and saved them on my smartphone for easy reference without extra weight.


Big Year, Big Emissions?

I had a bigger carbon footprint than usual, but I deliberately circled the world to be efficient, and averaged just one short flight a week. I joined a program to offset those extra emissions. Plus, my tight budget forced me to tread lightly wherever I was—in the end, this whole adventure (travel, equipment, and living expenses) cost about as much as a nice SUV.

The Superlatives provided the most species in the shortest time—I saw 625 in 12 days. It’s in the world’s most biodiverse region, and good infrastructure means it’s easy to get around. Uganda ran a close second (517 species in 11 days).

A birder marches on his stomach, and I ate extremely well this year. Highlights included eating, and. India was the only place that gave me a stomachache—a but the street restaurants in southern India were amazing.

Hot or cold, rain or shine, sticky or not, I always went birding. Melbourne, Australia, had with 110 degree Fahrenheit (43 Celsius) days, which means it edged out the United Arab Emirates as the most sizzling place I visited. The was the most frigid, though, at just below freezing, it was not as bone-chilling as you might think. And though my itinerary crossed many places during their wet seasons, I really got drenched in the Amazon of southeast Peru.

I said I wasn’t going to pick favorites, but three sightings stand out. In Brazil I waited several hours for a to arrive at its nest and was eventually rewarded when the male swooped in with a raccoon-like coati in its talons. 


Months later, in the Philippines, I missed the similarly powerful Philippine Eagle—but saw another favorite bird, the endemic, as consolation. Finally, I found the endangered in Thailand on my third try—a bittersweet sighting because, according to a 2012 Audubon article, the Spoonbill may soon be extinct.


The Final Word

Sometimes you can see the world most clearly when it’s visible all at once. This year I realized that global birding is entering a golden age. And, poignantly, this is happening just at a moment when many bird species are imperiled.

Never have so many species faced so uncertain a future. Global warming may seem abstract, but every day I witnessed its effects: Temperatures in Antarctica have risen 5 degrees Fahrenheit in the past 50 years, causing Adélie and Chinstrap Penguins to suffer while Gentoos thrive. From South America to Africa, locals complained of sporadic rainfall—the extreme drought conditions I experienced in São Paulo had officials considering cutting off the city’s water supply five days a week. With a spiking human population, especially in developing countries, the world’s most biodiverse habitats are under phenomenal pressure—ancient forests logged, pollution choking the air and water. 

Audubon Society with Noah Strycker

Over and over, I heard from locals how increasingly unpredictable climatic conditions are affecting their lives, their surroundings, and their birds.

At the same time, more people than ever are going birding. Field guides, site information, and access have never been better. Digital photography has sparked a new set of bird enthusiasts, especially in Brazil and Asia. Fresh birding clubs have sprung up in Mexico, China, the Philippines, and elsewhere—sometimes thanks to just one or two enthusiastic personalities. The pursuit of birding, and interest in local conservation, has been revolutionized on a global scale.




Here are all the species Noah saw as he traveled the world on his 2015 Big Year.

While I was out there, the received thousands of visits a day. Something about this journey captured the hearts and imaginations of all kinds of people: university students, hospitalized people, teenagers in faraway countries, janitors, and millionaires, to name a few. You never know how your actions will touch others—my birding fascination was sparked by a fifth-grade teacher—but I hope this project inspired a greater appreciation for birds around the planet among people of all ages, abilities, colors, incomes, and nationalities.

I ended my Big Year more stoked than ever. After 365 straight days of birding, I woke up on January 1, 2016, joined some friends, and went outside to see what birds we could find.