Thursday, July 23, 2009

Permanently Ban the Sale of Ivory


The growing demand for ivory has lead to skyrocketing rates of illegal poaching, and unless ivory sales are permanently banned, elephants and rhinos are likely to go extinct. In fact, Kenyan Wildlife Authorities recently seized $1 million worth of elephant tusks and rhino horns bound for ivory markets in Asia. Please sign this petition today to call for a permanent, total ban on ivory sales to save elephants and rhinos!

Seal killing in Namibia

Bart Smithers, film maker extraodinaire, has despite being beaten up, arrested and thrown in jail, managed to get out footage of the Namibian seal killing.






The footage can be viewed here: http://www.bontvoordieren.nl

Please be aware that the footage is upsetting and traumatic. However, it is incredibly important to get this out to the world. This is the only new footage which is available. The last footage which was release was back in the late nineties beginning two thousands when Namibia threw
open the doors to let the media see how "humane" the killing is. After that, there was a complete ban on anyone witnessing the process.

Tuesday, July 21, 2009

Leopard Number 29 is dead !

Courtesy of Landmark Foundation : http://www.landmarkfoundation.org

29 NOW DEAD, 29 NOW LEFT!

Press Release: 16 July 2009


This large territorial male leopard, of 41kg, was killed on the outskirts of Port Elizabeth yesterday. It was caught around the neck in a cable snare and died of suffocation. It was likely a dominant male that commanded a territory of larger than 25 000 hectares. The snare was made from a bicycle break cable.





Killed on the outskirts of Port Elizabeth

The damage to the already stretched genetic stock of the species in the region and the social structures of this population of leopard is incalculable.


This leopard's death is of major concern, as a recently completed Rhodes University study indicated that this cat would have been part of a core population of territorial leopard that lived in a 300 000 ha area in and around the Baviaanskloof Reserve. The study indicated that only about 30
territorial leopards remained in this region (between PE/Uitenhage and Uniondale, Eastern Cape, South Africa). Over the past 6 years we know of at least 29 killed leopards in this area. It does not require a rocket scientist to realize that this species is under severe stress in this
region, and that perhaps we are past the 11th hour for its survival.
Such snaring and agricultural production practices such as gin traps, poisons and hunting dogs continue to threaten these species and hundreds of others across the country.

Such events are now so common that it is almost not newsworthy. Yet, we still live in a country where we have legislation that makes it legal to
set leg hold traps (such as gin traps), to use poisons and even to hunt predators from helicopters. We have many other less charismatic species suffering similar and worse fates, and at far greater rates. We have production bodies like the National Woolgrowers, the South African Mohair Growers and Red Meat Producers Organization calling for more lethal controls of predators through indiscriminate methods. We as consumers must vote with our wallets and support produce that is not
tainted with this abuse of our wildlife! Please support Fair Game(tm) Wildlife Friendly produce when it appears on your supermarket shelves later in the year, as it will be produce that does not destroy our
wildlife in its production, and it will reward producers that comply with audited and acceptable production standards that are ethically and ecologically acceptable.

Cubs rescued on Sunday 12 July 2009 in the Baviaanskloof


The Landmark Foundation has tried to create some respite for the leopard in this corner of South Africa, and working with willing farmers, especially in the Baviaanskloof River Valley of the Baviaanskloof Mega-reserve, to counter the persecution of the leopard in this region.
It has seen us now rescue 27 leopards since 2004, of which 24 cases have taken place in the last 30 months in an around the Baviaanskloof and the Garden Route areas. The last of these rescues occurred on Sunday 12 July 2009, where 2 leopard cubs were rescued in a cage trap - unusually
caught together. This area had been totally cleared of gin traps which had been the method of predator control previously, and which in the past would certainly have resulted in the death of at least one of these cats. The cubs were released and reunited with their mother who was seen
with them at the release.

--end press release--

Issued by: Dr Bool Smuts, Director Landmark Foundation
+27 (0)83 324 3344