Your Gifts At Work

 

a wild snow leopard looks back

Snow leopard camera-trapped by Dr. Som Ale, SLC’s Regional Conservation Director, at about 4800 meters in the in the Annapurna Conservation Area, Nepal

 

As the Snow Leopard Conservancy’s newest Program Officer, I would formally like to thank you–all our partners who have contributed to our organization and supported our intention to continue work with honor and integrity.
With active projects in Siberia, Mongolia, Nepal, and Pakistan and with our sister-organization in Northern India, we have continued to head out into the field with your donor dollars, addressing the issues of community-based conservation and research with a large emphasis in honoring indigenous cultures.
We believe that saving a species is directly connected with saving heritage and through that we seek a better global balance.

Yours truly,
Lucy O’Dea

 

pie charts showing distribution of SLC monies

2010 Income and Expenses

Here are some recent examples of your donor dollars at work:

Dr. Rodney Jackson sets a camera trap

 

 

Local monitors have been trained in camera trapping in Siberia and Nepal with some spectacular results, as above. While giving indigenous communities a role in conserving their cats, these images are also helping to refine overall estimates of wild snow leopards.

 

 

 

 

The Conservancy supported the second annual International Snow Leopard Day Festival in Siberia’s Altai Republic. Children from Mongolia, Kyrgyzstan, and the Altai Republic created performances and art to impress upon their elders the need to coexist with the snow leopard.

link to vidio of Mongolian girl singing and dancing

Click on the photo above for a short video of a performance by Arailym, who is in 5th grade in Bayan Ulgi, Mongolia. She is singing in the old traditional Altai Maktal style of the Mongolian Altai Mountains, the stronghold of the Mongolian throat singers. The words of the song, which is in praise of the Altai Mountains, may differ from one village to another but the style and melody are one. Arailym’s dance is the traditional Biyelgee, which originated with Mongolian livestock herders.

villagers build their livestock corral

 

 

Livestock depredation is a major source of conflict between people and snow leopards. To date, the Conservancy has supported the improvement of more than 80 corrals in India, Nepal and Pakistan. One herder in Ladakh commented: “We herded our sheep and goats into the new pen, locked the door and walked the two miles to our home. In the morning, there were tracks of a snow leopard all around the pen but we lost none of our animals. As Buddhists, we are very happy, for the sake of our livestock, and for the snow leopards who might now go back to hunting blue sheep. Also we are very happy because now we shepherds can go home and get a good night’s sleep.”

 

Snow leopard camera-trapped by SLC partners in Mongolia

 

Your gifts supported a concerted effort by the Conservancy and the Snow Leopard Network (SLN), a 450+ member-strong alliance to stop the Mongolian Ministry of Nature, Environment and Tourism from issuing permits allowing the hunting of four snow leopards “for research purposes.” SLN sent a letter to the Minister requesting that the permit be revoked. On March 23rd, the government rescinded the permits.

collecting snow leopard scats in Mongolia

 

Genetic analysis of snow leopard scat has greatly expanded the information we can obtain on this incredibly elusive cat. Your funding has helped us and our partners lead the way in applying these techniques. Herders themselves are helping to identify sites where effective conservation measures can be implemented at the local and regional (landscape) level.

By monitoring scat, herders also help to identify the best corridors with good quality habitat that connect each isolated snow leopard population “patch” with its nearest neighbor.

 

 

Find us on Guidestar.

remote fieldwork