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Animal News (Except Bigcats)

Sanju Offline
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( This post was last modified: 06-22-2020, 03:26 PM by Sanju )


*This image is copyright of its original author

https://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/indi...192270.cms
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BorneanTiger Offline
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( This post was last modified: 08-01-2020, 06:51 PM by BorneanTiger )

Good news:

UAE:
Earlier, the Environment Agency – Abu Dhabi (EAD) had reintroduced the Scimitar-horned oryx (Oryx dammah) to Ouadi Rimé-Ouadi Achim Game Reserve in Batha Region, Chad, and following its success, it decided to reintroduce more endangered species, starting with the critically endangered Addax (Addax nasomaculatus), while increasing the conservation efforts of one of the last wild populations of Dama gazelles (Nanger dama, formerly Gazella dama), offering a potential lifeline to these species from the brink of extinction: https://www.oryxreintroduction.org, https://wam.ae/en/details/1395302805981, https://www.thenational.ae/uae/environme...d-1.942355, https://www.thenational.ae/uae/environme...-1.1019300, https://www.afrik21.africa/en/chad-addax...-in-batha/

This month, the first wild-born addax antelope from an Abu Dhabi herd had been born in Chad, with a second calf being born two days later: https://www.abudhabienv.ae/news-58850.html, http://wam.ae/en/details/1395302855512, https://www.thenational.ae/uae/environme...-1.1050228, https://saudigazette.com.sa/article/5956...ld-in-Chad

Credit: EAD
   

Also, last month, an Olive Ridley sea turtle (Lepidochelys olivacea) was found nesting in the UAE for first time, with a hatchling seen crawling towards the ocean in Sharjah: https://www.thenational.ae/uae/environme...-1.1034402, https://saudigazette.com.sa/article/5943...in-the-UAE, https://anba.com.br/en/olive-ridley-turt...irst-time/

Credit: The Environment and Protected Areas Authority in Sharjah
   

USA:
Roadkill rates of animals (including deer, pumas, bears, other wild animals, dogs, sheep and other domestic animals) fall dramatically by as much as 58%, as the lockdown forced traffic to fall by as much as 73%, during peak times in March and April: https://www.nationalgeographic.com/anima...n-traffic/
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BorneanTiger Offline
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What the Covid-19 pandemic has meant for the conservation of turtles in Oman: https://wildfact.com/forum/topic-turtle-...#pid124855
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Israel Spalea Offline
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" Happy birthday to @yao Ming! He’s the world’s biggest star from the most populous country. And he’s been fighting to end the illegal wildlife trade for more than 12 years. NBA all-star and Olympian Yao Ming is not just a WildAid ambassador, he’s an integral part of WildAid’s family and the conservation community.

Hear him speak, and you immediately begin to understand why Yao has been able to help convince a country of 1.4 billion people to stop buying ivory and galvanize support for China’s domestic ban. Thank you for all you do for #wildlife we are truly grateful to have you in our #herd "



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United Kingdom Sully Offline
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The world’s first successfully cloned endangered Przewalski’s horse (Equus przewalskii) was born on August 6, 2020. Revive & Restore, San Diego Zoo Global (SDZG), and ViaGen Equine collaborated to clone from a cell line of a genetically important stallion that had been cryopreserved since 1980 at the SDZG Frozen Zoo. This groundbreaking achievement was conceived as a new strategy to help restore genetic diversity to the Przewalski’s horse species.






OVERCOMING A GENETIC BOTTLENECK
The Przewalski’s horse (pronounced “shuh-VAL-skees”) population faces the same struggle that many endangered species face—recovering from a severe historic bottleneck. Today’s Przewalski’s horses, of which there are now approximately 2,000, are descendants of just 12 individuals saved from extinction in the early 1900s. Learn more about the species.
Genetic bottlenecks like this can lead to inbreeding and loss of fitness. These negative impacts may emerge long after a species seems to have recovered in numbers. This is because the genetic diversity of endangered species continues to decline over the many generations it takes to repopulate the species, due to a process known as genetic driftA seemingly healthy recovered population can quickly decline due to inbreeding depression. Or the species can struggle to cope with disease or environmental changes—all because the population has lost the genetic variation it needs to adapt. Additionally, larger species like the Przewalski’s horse are more vulnerable to environmental disruption, habitat loss, and climate change than are smaller animal species. Increasing their genetic variation now may help the Przewalkski’s horse species survive in a changing world.
Genetic rescue is one strategy to reduce the negative impact of inbreeding by introducing individuals from unrelated populations. But for the Przewalski’s horse, there are no unrelated populations to draw from. However, forward-thinking conservationists saved living cells from over a dozen Przewalski’s horses and cryopreserved them at the SDZG Frozen Zoo. These cell lines contain genetic diversity that has been lost to recent generations.
CLONING FOR CONSERVATION
Now a portion of this lost genetic diversity may be recovered by cloning historic Przewalski’s horse from frozen cells. Successful breeding can increase genetic diversity by reintroducing lost variants to the surviving population. This is the hope for the new foal, Kurt, who was cloned from cells that had been cryopreserved at the SDZG Frozen Zoo in 1980. These were cells from astallion that was born in 1975 in the UK, was transferred to the US in 1978, and lived until 1998. He was recorded as Stud Book number 615 (SB615) and known as “Kuporovic” by his zookeepers. Learn more about this cloning process.
The SB615 cell line was chosen for genetic rescue cloning because an analysis of the captive breeding pedigree revealed that the genome offers significantly more genetic variation than any living Przewalski’s horse. Now that the genetic variation from Kuporovic “lives” again in Kurt, Kurt may become the most important horse in the North American captive breeding population. He may also become the first cloned animal to restore lost genetic variation to its species.


THE IMPORTANCE OF GENETIC VARIATION AND SB615

This is the second time that SB615 has changed the course of Przewalski’s horse conservation. In the early 1900s, there were very few Przewalski’s horses left in captivity. To save the species, several zoos interbred their Przewalski’s horses with domestic horses. This created a clash amongst zookeepers. Some felt that “hybrid” horses were inferior to “pure” Przewalski’s horses, and so lineages containing domestic horse ancestry were intentionally segregated for decades. (Here “pure” and “hybrid” are meant as animal husbandry terms.) Due to this, different Przewalski’s horses today have ancestry from only a few of the 12 founders. Separating these lines created two additional bottlenecks for the species. Later, in an effort to purge domestic horse genetics from the “hybrid” line, zoos in North America selectively bred only those males that had “pure” wild horse ancestry. Stallions with domestic horse genes were not bred. This practice led to increasingly more severe inbreeding within both lines of Przewalski’s horse. 

By the 1980s, this became a major concern and prompted an extensive pedigree analysis. It was discovered that the stallion SB615, although a descendant of the hybrid horses, actually possessed unique ancestry from two wild founders, SB11 and SB12. In fact, SB615 carried significantly more unique alleles (or variants of genes) from those wild founders than other living Przewalski’s horses.
Due to the discovery of his valuable ancestry, SB615 was bred to pass on his unique genetics. The captive breeding program in North America changed course in 2004. Zookeepers began breeding all viable Przewalski’s horses, mares and stallions, both “pure” and “hybrid” and the genetic diversity of subsequent generations substantially improved. SB615 was one of the first stallions of the “hybrid” line to be bred in North American zoos, and today he has descendants living in several zoos across the US. While the program greatly improved the genetic health of recent generations, genetic drift continues to erode genetic diversity. 

THE BEGINNINGS OF THE PRZEWALSKI’S HORSE GENETIC RESCUE PROJECT

Kurt is named in honor of Dr. Kurt Benirshke, a geneticist at the San Diego Zoo who in 1975 had a prescient idea. Dr. Benirshke began what is now the Frozen Zoo, collecting and cryopreserving the cell lines of endangered species and safely storing away genetic diversity before it was lost. At the time the collection was a bet on cloning and reproductive technologies that did not yet exist. Nearly fifty years later, with the partnership of San Diego Zoo Global Frozen Zoo, Revive & Restore, and ViaGen Pets and Equine, Dr. Benirschke’s plans are quite literally coming to life. 

It was in February 2017 that Revive & Restore co-founders Stewart Brand, Ryan Phelan, and lead scientist Ben Novak first met with Blake Russell, president of ViaGen Pets and Equine to discuss the potential for cloning endangered species. ViaGen’s advancements in the commercial cloning of domestic species—including cattle, horses, pigs, goats, sheep, dogs, and cats—made it clear that the technology was no longer a theoretical or academic endeavor. 

Could ViaGen use their extensive knowledge in cloning domestic species to help save related wild species? Which species might benefit first? Revive & Restore reached out to San Diego Zoo Global to ask. It was Dr. Oliver Ryder who helped identify many viable, decades-old cell lines from multiple, endangered species. Together, Revive & Restore, ViaGen Equine, and San Diego Zoo Global selected the Przewalski’s horse as a most worthy candidate.
After the foal is weaned he will join others of his species at the San Diego Zoo Safari Park. It is our hope that in five to ten years, as Kurt matures into the world’s first cloned Przewalski’s stallion, he will successfully mate and thus contribute to the genetic diversity of his species and to the future of conservation innovation.
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BorneanTiger Offline
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( This post was last modified: 09-21-2020, 11:20 PM by BorneanTiger )

Good and bad news about birds:

* Thousands of Migrating Birds Drop Dead Across Southwestern U.S.A. | Researchers aren’t sure what’s causing the mass die-off impacting birds flying south for the winter: https://www.smithsonianmag.com/smart-new...180975828/

* Rare and enigmatic Russian bird spotted on Abu Dhabi's Saadiyat Island | A Steppe whimbrel (Numenius phaeopus alboaxillaris) - of which only 100 exist today - was captured on camera by two bird watchers: https://www.thenational.ae/uae/environme...-1.1079845

Credit: Oscar Campbell
   
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T I N O Online
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( This post was last modified: 12-07-2020, 07:55 PM by T I N O )

A very sad lost of a rhino at Umbabat (Greater Kruger National Park)
Umbabat Nature Reserve is situated on the bank of the Nhlaralumi River in the Bushbuckridge Municipality, adjacent to the Kruger National Park.  

It grieves us to advise that a wounded female Rhino has had to be euthanised following a poaching incident. The matter is under further investigation by SAPS and the other relevant Authorities. The reserve, at present, has no known suspects.
A poaching incident, particularly one so brutal and lacking in compassion, and irrespective of the Reserve in which it occurs, is a loss for all of us – on many levels.
Whether this rhino was poached upon the Umbabat, or whether it walked into the Umbabat in a wounded state is irrelevant to the shocking reality of what occurs all around us on almost a daily basis.
UPNR Management and staff will therefore continue with its endeavours, however the circumstances are frustrating and the resources are limited, together with our neighbouring partner reserves, to protect our Reserves, our fauna and flora, our visitors, our human life and one another.

note: Is this post appropriate in this thread? If isn't is,I'll delete it and I'll apologize it
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United Kingdom Sully Offline
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Pine martens return to the south of England for first time in over a century
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United Kingdom Sully Offline
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Parthenogenesis (asexual reproduction) in california condors. Amazing how animals of this size and even bigger (komodo dragons) can do this.

Endangered birds experience 'virgin birth,' a first for the species (nationalgeographic.com)
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Russian Federation MatijaSever Offline
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( This post was last modified: 04-18-2024, 08:19 PM by MatijaSever )

(06-09-2020, 05:12 AM)Dark Jaguar Wrote:  I didn't know they were giving benefits, that's cool its one more reason not to kill them. When I first saw this a few years back they encroaching human inhabit vilages I thought humans would retaliate, revit tools so far I didn't hear a case of human death in the area and hopefully it continues that way. despite tapirs and monkeys also doing a pretty good job spreading seeds over the forests its interesting Hippos playing a role of the extinct ones, in case they decide to remove them they gotta invest alot and not kill them imo. ai background generator in order not to kill them they could take them to zoos or something but from the video they're not willing to kill them thats good but the problem will start when they multiply their numbers more and more, there's also the genetic viability so they wouldn't be as healthy as their African brothers. Its a complicated situation and I agree on your opinion on the part they could use them on contribution to the environment.
It's fascinating to see how these hippos are inadvertently playing a role in ecosystem restoration, even though they're not native to the area.
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