beautiful-wildlife:

Cheetah Cubs by © franslanting

When cheetah cubs are two months old they are irresistible to watch. Siblings are sparring partners around the clock. But the odds against their survival are not as appealing. More than half of all cheetah cubs do not survive their first four weeks of life and most of the rest do not make it beyond their first year. Cheetahs can’t climb trees like leopards, they can’t dig burrows like hyenas, and they’re not social like lions, so they are always vulnerable no matter where they are.

beautiful-wildlife:

Cheetahs, Serengeti by © franslanting

Two young cheetah brothers are crouching down to drink from a water hole in the Serengeti. Cheetahs may be able to survive for long periods without drinking water and rely instead on the blood from their prey, but they don’t pass up an opportunity to drink when they can. You can tell they are still young because of the ruff of fur along their necks, which disappears when they mature.

On the Brink: African Wild Dog

newshour:


African wild dogs are social pack animals. (Reuters)

Poachers use wire snares in many parts of Africa to trap wild antelope, but collateral damage occurs too. African wild dogs, one of the world’s most endangered mammals, are often caught by these snares. Due in large part to this poaching practice, the population of African wild dogs has dropped by 90 percent – to 6,660 – in the last century.  

So, zoologist Brandon Davis and his team formed the Painted Dog Protection Initiative and designed specialized collars to protect the animals from these deadly entanglements.

The African wild dogs’ susceptibility to snares arises largely from their social nature. They are pack animals that move in groups and look after one another.

African wild dogs are social pack animals. (Reuters)

“They will lick the wounds of the injured,” Davis said, explaining that these animals are “one of the few species that actually care for their injured.”

When one wild dog is snagged by a wire snare, others will return to care for the packmate, and then get trapped or injured as well. If enough traps are present in a snare line, an entire pack can be caught.

Wire snares are lightweight and low cost traps, so they are easy to obtain and use. It takes only a light touch to trigger the wire loop to tighten down on the animal’s neck.


Davis’ team tested the specialised collars on domestic dogs. (Brandon Davis)

Davis’ team noticed tracking collars – used in research to keep tabs on a wild dog’s location – helped animals caught in snares to avoid suffocation. So, the team built custom collars with rivets and clips that allow a trapped animal to breathe and break free.

Now that testing is completed, the Painted Dog Protection Initiative plans to deploy ten collars with wild dogs living in at-risk packs in Zimbabwe. They aim to build 100 additional collars, which could protect 20 percent of the wild dog population in Zimbabwe.

On the Brink: Pangolins

newshour:

By Rashmi Shivni

Pokémon fans should be familiar with the pangolin. The scaly plates of this real-life critter inspired the armored, roly-poly defenses of the sandshrew Pokémon.

Sandshrew in the midst of its defense curl.

Though the scales and somersaults protect pangolins from hungry predators, such as lions, these mechanisms can’t save them from humans. To date, pangolins are the most trafficked mammals in the world, according to “The Global Trafficking of Pangolins,” a 2017 report by TRAFFIC (a wildlife trade monitoring network). The number of pangolins remaining in the wild is unknown, but scientists estimate populations dropped up to 80 percent in the last decade.

A pangolin’s evolved self defense caught in the act. Photo by Mark Sheridan-Johnson/Getty Images

“Poachers simply find them, pick them up, and send the off to their dooms,” Paul Todd, a senior staff attorney with the NRDC’s Wildlife Trade Initiative, told the PBS NewsHour via email. “The defenses that have evolved over millions of years do absolutely no good when faced with the threat posed by people.”

Pangolins are native to Africa and Asia, and they’re the most trafficked mammal in the world. Visual by Rashmi Shivni.

Pangolins are native to Asia and Africa, and they’re the only mammals adorned with scales. Todd said in 2017, African authorities confiscated almost 50 tons of pangolin scales. In April and May, law enforcement in Vietnam and Taiwan confiscated 20 tons of scales shipped from Africa. Between 2010 and 2015, authorities around the world made a total of 1,270 pangolin shipment seizures. But Todd and other experts believe the actual numbers are higher because, according to the TRAFFIC report, some countries reported more pangolin trafficking than seizures.

“Remember that these are fairly small animals, like the size of a small to medium dog, so a ton in weight of scales or other parts can represent thousands of individual animals,” Todd said.

Pangolin scales confiscated by Hong Kong authorities. Photo by Alex Hofford via Flickr.

Even though Asia has its own species of pangolins, African pangolins are imported to Asia in droves due high demand for their scales and meat.  Nearly 70 countries play a role in the illegal pangolin trade, according to a report by TRAFFIC. This list includes the U.S., China, Germany, Vietnam, Thailand, Belgium and Malaysia. Mongabay reported in May that all pangolin parts are in high demand, mostly in Asia. Pangolin meat is a delicacy, their skin is used in leather materials, and their scales are used in traditional medicine.

This white-bellied pangolin searches in a tree for insects. Photo by the Tikki Hywood Foundation.

Pangolins play vital roles in their ecosystems by cultivating soil and managing insect populations. A pangolin consumes millions of ants and termites every year. Losing them could mean serious pest infestations in their habitats.

But hope for the pangolin exists. The PBS NewsHour reported in 2016 that CITES (an international group in charge of wildlife trade) banned international pangolin trade. Pangolin trafficking still occurs, but this ban has lowered the demand for pangolin scales and meat. Todd said the U.S., China and other countries involved in pangolin trade have stepped up enforcement under the ban.

“But there’s a lot more that needs to be done,” Todd said. “It’s entirely within our power to erase the species forever, and so it’s also our duty to make sure that doesn’t happen.”

I’m on the fence about the dog. Looks kind of like a beagle. Could be a dorgi if it’s the light/reflection off the glass fuzzing up the colour and longer fur. I’m kind of thinking it’s M’s middle finger dragging out Guy with QE and have him at the wedding (totes American & iconoclastic to have a dog at church!). I’m actually hoping it will be an Ursula/dog moment :D would be sooo epic. Whatever it is, we might see tomorrow.

anonymoushouseplantfan:

I’d love an Ursula/dog moment, but I think that’s a dorgi.

nycrealroyal:

redrubied:

nycrealroyal:

vintagebutterfly1975:

nycrealroyal:

claireofluxembourg:

longliveroyalty:

lilacmagnolia17:

HM The Queen and Meghan’s dog,Guy riding beside her into Windsor May 17th 2018

Guy has just moved up in the world #doggoals

Guy out there living his best life and we here, ranting on the internet

That isn’t guy. It’s one of hers! Wendy or Candy or the adopted one. She still got two dorgis.

that’s the queen’s dog?

Yep!

er… facts…. and google help guys… @nycrealroyal

The Queen’s Corgis passed away. The last one passed just recently – In APRIL as in last month…

https://globalnews.ca/news/4153295/queen-elizabeths-corgi-dies/

https://www.cnn.com/2018/04/18/europe/queen-last-corgi-dead-intl/index.html

http://people.com/royals/queen-elizabeth-last-corgi-dies/

I know you guys have a ‘narrative’ you’re married to but of facts… reported by legit news… that.. well…

That was MM’s Guy riding with the Queen. Her Corgies passed. End of.

SHE GOT TWO DORGIS! JESUS!

It’s a DORGI not a Corgi!