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  Tigers of Ranthambore & Western India Landscape
Posted by: scamander - 12-19-2015, 12:15 AM - Forum: Tiger - Replies (403)
I'd like to see and know more about the Ranthambore tigers. I've always been rather fascinated by them.
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  The Proboscidea of the Past
Posted by: tigerluver - 12-17-2015, 07:08 AM - Forum: Prehistoric animals - Replies (85)
To enter into the realm of a new group of giants, I invite you to Proboscidea with us.

Shoulder height, body mass and shape of proboscideans by Asier Larramendi is a groundbreaking publication is still in press, but has been released in its pre-official form. A few aspects are special about this work. One, the authors reconstruct an entire animal, rather than just mass. Two, the authors have used new methods based on volume to mass relationships rather than basic isometry, using equations as complex as those used to estimates masses of dinosaurs. Three, they provided visual comparisons, what better way to start this topic?


*This image is copyright of its original author

*This image is copyright of its original author

*This image is copyright of its original author

*This image is copyright of its original author


Palaeoloxodon namadicus is the final major finding of this study, considering the proposal of its size. If accurate, a new king of mammals may have just been crowned.

My own interest in this order was piqued by the Javan specimens. More on that next. Until then, share as much you'd like!
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  The Sundarban Tiger
Posted by: Pckts - 12-15-2015, 11:22 PM - Forum: Tiger - Replies (262)
Since the Sunderbans is such a magnificent place and the tigers there are so unique, I figured that I would start a thread on them and if you'd like to post any other cool images of flora or fauna, feel free.

Tigress with cubs from the Mangroves......
Sundarban Tiger Reserve
Nov 2015

*This image is copyright of its original author



The Ruler of Sunderban.

The sighting of this male was a well crafted drama.We knew he was at Dobanki.We saw fresh pug marks all around the island.He crossed the river during the daytime.Two boats saw him crossing.We missed that opportunity by just 1 minute.Then we thought that he will come to the waterhole,where the forest department provides sweet water.Chital calls were all around.He was on the move.But he did not came.We left the watchtower,and was on the journey back to Jhorkhali,where we were to spend the night.Just after leaving the watchtower,we saw fresh pug marks on the mudflat.He had just crossed!We decided to put a round around Dobanki Island.And suddenly our boatman shouted in excitement "Sir,Baagh,Sir Baagh"(Sir,Tiger,Sir ,Tiger).And we saw him.Walking through the thick mangrove near the banks.....it was just like a dream.And then suddenly he stopped,put his majestic face out of the forest,gazed directly at us.The late evening light was not good at all for photography,and I had to push my camera to ISO 6400 to get a decent shutterspeed of 1/120s,at wide open.
A very common belief is that the swamp tigers are relatively small in size,but this guy will ensure that the swamp tigers are no small business.

Sunderban Tiger Reserve , Oct 2015.
Canon EOS 7D Mark II , Canon 400mm f5.6 L USM.
© All Copyrights Reserved.
— at Sundarban Tiger Reserve.

*This image is copyright of its original author

The Mangrove King
08 October, 2015, Sudhanyakhali Watch Tower, Sunderban Tiger Reserve, West Bengal, India
For better view, please see it in full screen at
https://www.flickr.com/…/228…/in/dateposted-public/lightbox/
If you like the post, like the page too. Feel free to share.
Thanks for viewing.

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  Which zoos have rare big cats species
Posted by: Dr Panthera - 12-15-2015, 10:56 PM - Forum: Captive & Domesticated Animals - Replies (8)
Please post your own experience in seeing big cats from particular eco-types in different zoos ( please avoid non-accredited facilities/private collections)

Tigers:

Sundarban Bengal tigers: a male and a female in Damascus zoo-Syria 2010

Nepalese Bengal tigers: 27 tigers in Al-Ain zoo, UAE in the 1980's

Presumed Bengal tigers: ( unknown origins or mixed origins) several zoos

Malaysian tigers: a male and a female Houston zoo, USA 2013  (note: several American zoos state that they have Indochinese tigers, these in fact are Malaysian in origin, the only known P.t.corbetti are in zoos in Thailand and Vietnam)

Sumatran tigers: a male and a female in the Toronto zoo, Canada 2015, a male and a female in the London zoo, UK, 2009 and another couple in Drayton, UK 2009

Amur Tigers : a male and a female in the Bronx zoo, USA, two other couples in Calgary zoo, Canada and Edmonton zoo Canada 2008
A male in the Toronto zoo, Canada 1998, a male and a female in the Buffalo zoo USA 2015
A female in Safari Niagara, Stevensville, Canada 2015 ( her mate died the previous year)
A couple in the Vienna zoo , Austria 2009

White Tigers:
Safari Niagara 2015 a white male
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  Good News & Success Stories
Posted by: sanjay - 12-13-2015, 04:46 PM - Forum: News, Events & Updates - Replies (26)
A success story of orphaned tigress - Cinderella

This is story of a Amur tigress. It is story of successful conservation program of Russia. Special thanks to my friend LorRaine Partusch for letting me the basic information.

Cinderella, orphaned at 5 months of age due to poachers killing her mother. She was found starving, basically "on deaths door" she was so weak they "literally picked her up". She had frostbite so bad, the tip of her tail was dead. Here's a photo where they temporarily wrapped her tail with duct tape. Her short tale is her visual fingerprint! She would spend the following year 1/2 alone, in an enclosure.

Taught to hunt using prey release boxes. Once determined she successfully took down prey, she was fitted with a radio collar & released into the wild. Not only has she survived, she produced offspring! That, has NEVER been achieved by tiger... ...EVER! Cinderella forever made history, in record books! And even more important, she is no longer alone. You can see how affectionate she is, Cinderella is filled with an emotion she thought would never be attained again, happiness!

Below is the image of Cinderella when she was rescued

*This image is copyright of its original author


You can read more information about Cinderella here, http://wildfact.com/forum/topic-amur-tig...1#pid16111

Some of more images of cinderella

*This image is copyright of its original author


09 May 2013, Cinderella Returned to Nature (1) , with Victor Lukarevskiy

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  Reintroduction of Wolves and Lynx into Britain
Posted by: Sully - 12-12-2015, 02:22 AM - Forum: Projects, Protected areas & Issues - Replies (48)
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-scotland-33533035

Thoughts? We all know the positives in that it will contain the out of control deer population that decimate vegetation, but can big predators like wolves be successfully reintroduced, or has it been too long since their last inhabitation? And will as is often the case, the big predator be killed for eating livestock? And is britain too Urban, could wolves take the path foxes take and become urban scavenging all they can?


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  Snow Leopard (Panthera uncia)
Posted by: Sully - 12-09-2015, 11:51 PM - Forum: Leopard - Replies (218)
Surprised this thread hasn't been done already. Feel free to post vids, pics, data, and anything else.


*This image is copyright of its original author


Also, can you spot the snow leopard in these pics?


*This image is copyright of its original author


*This image is copyright of its original author


Here is a good article on their prey preferences

http://journals.plos.org/plosone/article...ne.0088349
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  Boycott Jimmy Johns
Posted by: Pckts - 12-09-2015, 11:28 PM - Forum: Petitions, Pleas & Donations - Replies (4)
For anybody living in the US, you have probably seen a Jimmy Johns sandwich shop pop up around you, it looks like this fella is a seriously delusional dude who has killed animals for "sport" and worst of all, he is even killing endangered species as well. I for one will not eat at any of his establishments ever again


If you're looking for a sandwich shop to boycott look no further...
Jimmy John Liautaud is the owner of the Jimmy John's Sandwich franchise. He is posing with a dead critically endangered black rhino he killed which was the last female rhino in the Mangetti National Park in Namibia.
Read more on the story here http://allafrica.com/stories/201410230452.html
JImmy John's facebook https://www.facebook.com/jimmyjohns?fref=ts
oneworldwildlife.org


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  Modern weights and measurements on wild tigers
Posted by: sanjay - 12-09-2015, 12:35 PM - Forum: Tiger - Replies (1551)
In this thread we will share images, videos and information regarding how measuring and weighing of tigers are done by different organization, biologist, scientist and forest department across India.

I will start by posting this recent image I saw on fb.

*This image is copyright of its original author


The above image is of Ranthambore national park, India where a group of biologist and forest department are taking measurements of tiger. The id of tiger is unknown and there is no further information related to this image.

Please post your finding here
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  Clouded Leopard (Neofelis nebulosa)
Posted by: Sully - 12-06-2015, 09:41 PM - Forum: Leopard - Replies (106)
My cuz wants to know some stuff about it so if you have any data to share I would appreciate it, you can also post pics, vids and what not.

*This image is copyright of its original author

Probably an overlooked understudied cat, but found relatively recently. I haven't found much on them with a few simple google searches, but maybe I'm just lazy. I found this at least.

"Ecology and conservation of Formosan clouded leopard, its prey, and other sympatric carnivores in southern Taiwan

*This image is copyright of its original author

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Chiang_ETD3.pdf (3.943Mb)
Chiang_ETD.pdf (3.597Mb)
Date
2007-11-14
Author
Chiang, Po-Jen
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During 2000-2004 I studied the population status of the Formosan clouded leopard (Neofelis nebulosa brachyurus) and the ecology of its prey and other sympatric carnivores in the largest remaining lowland primary forest in southern Taiwan. My research team and I set up 232 hair snare stations and 377 camera trap sites at altitudes of 150-3,092m in the study area. No clouded leopards were photographed in total 13,354 camera trap days. Hair snares did not trap clouded leopard hairs, either. Assessment of the prey base and available habitat indicated that prey depletion and habitat loss, plus historical pelt trade, were likely the major causes of extinction of clouded leopards in Taiwan.
Using zero-inflated count models to analyze distribution and occurrence patterns of Formosan macaques (Macaca cyclopis) and 4 ungulates, we found habitat segregation among these 5 herbivore species. Formosan macaques, Reeveâ s muntjacs (Muntiacus reevesi micrurus), and Formosan serows (Nemorhaedus swinhoei) likely were the most important prey species of Formosan clouded leopards given their body size and high occurrence rates in lower altitudes. In contrast, sambar deer (Cervus unicolor swinhoii) tended to occur more frequently as altitude increased. Formosan macaques exhibited seasonal differences in occurrence rates and were absent at altitudes > 2,500m in winter. Only Formosan serows showed preference for cliffs and rugged terrain, while the other 4 species, except wild boars (Sus scrofa taivanus), avoided these areas. Habitat segregation in forest understory and structure were more pronounced among the 4 ungulates. Forest structure rarely affected occurrence rates of Formosan macaques on the ground.
Niche relationships of the other sympatric carnivores were studied through habitat, diet, and temporal dimensions. Resource partitioning by carnivores was observed. Altitude was the strongest factor explaining the composition of the carnivore community in the local study-area scale and in the landscape scale across Taiwan. Carnivores could be divided into 2 groups: low-mid altitude consisting of Formosan ferret badgers (Melogale moschata subaurantiaca), gem-faced palm civets (Paguma larvata taivana), lesser oriental civets (Viverricula indica taivana), crab-eating mongooses (Herpestes urva formosanus), leopard cats (Prionailurus bengalensis chinensis), and feral cats (Felis catus), and the mid-high altitude group consisting of yellow-throated martens (Martes flavigula chrysospila), Siberian weasels (Mustela sibirica taivana), and Asiatic black bears (Ursus thibetanus formosanus). Carnivore richness was higher at mid altitudes where these 2 groups overlapped (i.e. mid-domain effect). The low-mid altitude carnivores were more nocturnal and tolerant of human activity and forest alteration except crab-eating mongooses, which were diurnal and avoided human encroachment. Similar to crab-eating mongooses, the mid-high altitude carnivores also avoided human encroachment and were diurnal except for Siberian weasels, which were more nocturnal. Diet summary based on their major food items for all sympatric carnivores revealed 3 groups of foragers which foraged on: invertebrates, small mammals, and plant fruits. Felidae, yellow-throated martens, and Siberian weasels preyed on small mammals. Asiatic black bears and gem-faced palm civets ate mostly plant fruits. The other 3 carnivores were mainly invertebrate foragers. These 9 carnivores partitioned resource uses in the 3 niche dimensions except for some overlap in resource use by leopard cats and feral cats.
Prey base for Formosan clouded leopards and the carnivore richness in Taiwan were found to be lower in areas with higher levels of human activity. On the other hand, Formosan macaques and ungulates could become over-abundant without human hunting and top carnivore predation. Mesopredator release may occur because of vanishing top carnivores, causing reduction of the lower trophic level prey species. It is important to assess the cascading impacts of the loss of the Formosan clouded leopards and Eurasian otters (Lutra lutra chinensis) and the declining Asiatic black bears and to consider reintroduction of Formosan clouded leopards, as well as active management of the other larger mammals. These results provided baseline information for reintroduction of clouded leopards and management of their prey and generated new hypotheses regarding the ecology of these large mammals for future investigation.
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/10919/29674
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