fbpx
Wikipedia

Panthera Corporation

Panthera Corporation, or Panthera, is a charitable organization devoted to preserving wild cats and their ecosystems around the globe. Founded in 2006, Panthera is devoted to the conservation of the world’s 40 species of wild cats and the vast ecosystems they inhabit. Their team of biologists, data scientists, law enforcement experts and wild cat advocates studies and protects the seven species of big cats: cheetahs, jaguars, leopards, lions, pumas, snow leopards and tigers.[1][2] Panthera also creates targeted conservation strategies for the world’s most threatened and overlooked small cats, such as fishing cats, ocelots and Andean cats. The organization has offices in New York City and Europe, as well as offices in Mesoamerica, South America, Africa and Asia.

Panthera
Founded2006
FoundersThomas S. Kaplan
Alan Rabinowitz
TypeNon-profit organization
20-4668756
FocusDevelops, implements, and oversees range-wide species conservation strategies
HeadquartersNew York City
Area served
World-wide
CEO
Frederic Launay
  • Jonathan Ayers
  • Frederic Launay
  • Thomas S. Kaplan
  • Ross J. Beaty
  • Joshua Fink
  • Lieutenant General Sir Graeme Lamb
  • Duncan McFarland
  • Hon. Claudia A. McMurray
  • H.E. Razan Khalifa Al Mubarak
  • H.H. Prince Badr bin Abdullah Al-Saud
  • Robert Quartermain
Key people
  • Joe Smith
  • Guy Balme
  • John Goodrich
  • Howard Quigley
  • Kim Young-Overton
  • Philipp Henschel
  • Mark Elbroch
  • Wai-Ming Wong
  • Gareth Mann
  • Byron Weckworth
Websitehttps://www.panthera.org

Programs and grants edit

Panthera works in partnership with local and international NGOs, scientific institutions, corporate partner and government agencies to develop and implement range-wide species conservation strategies. It has funded the Wildlife Conservation Research Unit at Oxford University, with a diploma program in international wildlife practice.[2] The organization also awards a number of grants to support promising field conservationists. These grant programs include the Kaplan Graduate Awards, the Research and Conservation Grants, the Small Cat Action Fund, the Sabin Snow Leopard Grant Program and the Winston Cobb Memorial Fellowships.[1]

Founders and leadership edit

Panthera was co-founded by American scientist Alan Rabinowitz and American entrepreneur Thomas S. Kaplan; who formerly served as Chairman of Panthera’s Board of Trustees, succeeded in 2021 by Jonathan Ayers.[3] Kaplan currently is Chairman of The Global Alliance for Wild Cats.[4] Rabinowitz was the first President and CEO from 2001 until 2017 when he was succeeded by French scientist Fred Launay.[5] Dr. Rabinowitz helped establish the world's first jaguar preserve in 1986, in Belize,[6] and was the main driving force behind the Jaguar Corridor that connects jaguar populations across its range, from Mexico to Argentina.[2]

John Goodrich leads Panthera’s Tiger Program and serves as Chief Scientist. Kim Young-Overton serves as Director of Panthera’s Cheetah Program, and Gareth Mann is Director of Panthera’s Leopard Program. Additionally, Byron Weckworth is the Director of the Snow Leopard Program, Wai-Ming Wong is Director of the Small Cats Program and Mark Elbroch is the Director of the Puma Program. Howard Quigley joined the organization in 2009[7] and is currently the Director of its Jaguar Program.

Board members edit

Projects edit

South and Central America projects edit

In South America, Mesoamerica and Mexico, Panthera is developing a transnational corridor to help protect the jaguar. Jaguar survival and health depends on a network of corridors that span the continent, while past efforts focused on developing distinct sanctuaries.[9] It is the jaguar's ability to travel long distances that prevents inbreeding and consequent extinction.

In August 2010, in Belize, it worked with the government to create the Labouring Creek Jaguar Corridor Wildlife Sanctuary, with more than 7,000 acres (28 km²) of land. The project is part of the Panthera Jaguar Corridor Initiative.[10] In Costa Rica, it is researching the routes that jaguars travel, and encouraging politicians and developers to respect those routes. They are also sponsoring community outreach programs to alleviate "jaguar conflict issues".[9] In Mesoamerica and North America, Panthera also works in Mexico, Guatemala,[11] Honduras[12] and Nicaragua, in addition to its ongoing work in Belize and Costa Rica.

In early 2010, Panthera signed a deal with the Colombian government to protect and develop the area where the Central and South American jaguar corridors converge in Colombia. In Brazil, Panthera manages Fazenda Jofre Velho,[13] one of the most important research bases in the Pantanal. They are working with local ranchers to find benign ways to protect their cattle, rather than the typical approach of shooting the jaguars.[6]

Panthera’s South American puma initiatives are focused in Chile. Working with their partner, the Fundación Cerro Guido Conservación,[14] they are exploring various methods to enhance the peaceful coexistence between pumas and sheep, including protective Maremma and Pirineos sheepdogs, Foxlights and supporting puma ecotourism.

United States projects edit

Panthera also works to protect pumas and small cats across the Americas. In the Northwest, their Olympic Cougar Project represents an important and exciting partnership between Panthera and six indigenous tribes, led by the Lower Elwha Klallam Tribe, to study and protect pumas in the dense coniferous forests, glacier-clad mountains and rugged coastlines of Washington’s stunning Olympic Peninsula.[15] Previously, Panthera’s puma initiatives in the United States were focused in Wyoming.

In the Northeast U.S., Panthera also runs the New York Millfarm Bobcat Project[16] to understand bobcat ecology in an eastern rural landscape and use this information to develop a replicable monitoring protocol to inform bobcat management plans in New York State and other States along the eastern coast.

Asia and Middle East projects edit

In Asia, Panthera's Tigers Forever project is planning a 5,000-mile (8,000 km) long corridor from Bhutan to Myanmar for wild tiger populations. The corridor would also include land in northeast India,Thailand, and Malaysia, and possibly Laos, Cambodia, and Vietnam.[17]

Panthera works in India, and has increased tiger numbers in Manas National Park. Additionally, further east, in August 2010, the government of Myanmar announced the expansion, by 4,248 square miles (11,000 km²), of the Hukawng Valley Tiger Reserve, the world's largest tiger preserve. Panthera CEO Alan Rabinowitz helped bring together representatives from the Kachin Independence Army and the Myanmar government to make the expansion possible.[18]

In Johor State, Malaysia, Panthera is working with the state government and the Wildlife Conservation Society to increase tiger numbers by 50% over a ten-year period. As part of that project, in early 2010 Panthera cameras captured an image of a rare spotted leopard in Taman Negara National Park and Endau-Rompin National Park, where only black leopards were believed to exist.[19]

Panthera also works in Thailand to protect wild cats, including tigers and fishing cats, and in Malaysian Borneo to study the five species of small cats that inhabit Sabah.

In August 2010, the government of Burma announced the expansion, by 4,248 square miles (11,000 km2), of the Hukawng Valley Tiger Reserve, the world's largest tiger preserve. Panthera CEO Alan Rabinowitz helped bring together representatives from the Kachin Independence Army and the Burma government to make the expansion possible.[20][21]

In Johor State, Malaysia, Panthera is working with the state government and the Wildlife Conservation Society to increase tiger numbers by 50% over a ten-year period. As part of that project, in early 2010 Panthera cameras captured an image of a rare spotted leopard in Taman Negara National Park and Endau-Rompin National Park, where only black leopards were believed to exist.[22]

Panthera's Snow Leopard Program is studying the species in Mongolia, and surveying new regions where the animals are likely to live, but have not yet been discovered. They work with local animal herders to train them in new approaches that will reduce livestock lost to the leopards. They are also working at protection for the estimated 3,500 to 7,000 snow leopards in Central Asia. Programs include giving a bonus to Mongolian herding communities that have gone one year without killing a snow leopard, and livestock vaccinations in Pakistan, where loss to disease is greater than leopard depredation.[23][24]

Panthera's Snow Leopard Program has studied the species in Mongolia, and surveyed new regions where the animals are likely to live, but have not yet been discovered.[24] They are also working to protect snow leopards in Central Asia, including in Kyrgyzstan and Tajikistan.[25][26][27]

Panthera’s work in the Middle East focuses on the Arabian Peninsula. With the support provided by the Royal Commission for AlUla (RCU), there is a strong focus on leopards, and specifically on restoring and conserving leopards in the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia (KSA).[28]

Africa projects edit

Panthera works across the African continent. In South Africa, the Sabi Sands protected area, bordering the Kruger National Park, is a long-term leopard research site and one of Panthera’s flagship projects. The knowledge generated from this work is critical to informing local wildlife management and broader conservation policy across the leopard range.[29]

Within Zambia, Panthera project sites are focused in the Greater Kafue Ecosystem (GKE).[30] They currently support 17 anti-poaching teams, two dedicated lion monitoring and protection teams and one leopard monitoring team across Kafue National Park and surrounding Game Management Areas.[31] Panthera’s Cheetah Program has also GPS collared cheetahs in the park.[32] Panthera also has project sites elsewhere across southern Africa, including in Zimbabwe and Angola.

Since 2010, Panthera has collaborated with Agence Nationale des Parcs Nationaux (ANPN), Gabon’s National Park Agency, to monitor wildlife in Plateaux Batéké National Park, where a lone male lion was spotted on a camera trap. Panthera Gabon is currently working on a countrywide leopard survey and helping the Gabonese government and ANPN identify gazelle wildlife movement corridors in order to secure and connect populations.[33]

Over the past decade, Panthera has built a strong working relationship with the government of Senegal, formalized through a long-term agreement with the Department of National Parks to strengthen park management and security in Niokolo-Koba National Park.[34] They provide direct support to ranger teams for effective large-scale patrols, the rebuilding and expansion of the park’s infrastructure and intensive ecological monitoring, including monitoring of lions using GPS-satellite collars.[35]

Panthera also works on initiatives in southern Africa that provide synthetic wild cat furs to communities in place of traditional garb.[36] They work with the Barotse Royal Establishment of the Lozi People in Zambia (Saving Spots Initiative) and the Nazareth Baptist Church eBuhleni (known as the Shembe Church) in South Africa (Furs for Life Initiative) in this capacity.[37][38] More than 18,500 synthetic capes have already been distributed to the Shembe Church,[39][40] and synthetic garb was provided to the Lozi people during the traditional Kuomboka Festival in 2022.

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b "Panthera: Partners in Wild Cat Conservation". Retrieved 22 May 2010.
  2. ^ a b c Davidson, Max (2009-08-11). . The Telegraph. Archived from the original on 2009-08-14. Retrieved 2016-08-05.
  3. ^ "Jonathan Ayers to chair Panthera board of directors". animalhealthdigest.com. Retrieved 2022-09-27.
  4. ^ "World's Small Wild Cats Get A Major Conservation Boost". WorldAtlas. 2021-03-22. Retrieved 2022-09-27.
  5. ^ "Panthera Appoints Dr. Frédéric Launay to Lead the Global Wild Cat Conservation Organization, Succeeding Dr. Alan Rabinowitz As CEO". Panthera. Retrieved 2022-09-27.
  6. ^ a b Di Paola, Mike (2009-06-29). "Slaughtered Jaguars Link New York Doctors, Brazilian Ranchers". Bloomberg. Retrieved 22 May 2010.
  7. ^ "Howard Quigley, Ph.D." Panthera. Retrieved 2022-09-27.
  8. ^ The Giving Pledge Welcomes 14 New Signatories Panthera. Access February 7, 2023.
  9. ^ a b Rosenthal, Elisabeth (2010-05-11). "To Help Jaguars Survive, Ease Their Commute". New York Times. Retrieved 2016-08-05.
  10. ^ Braun, David (August 10, 2010). . National Geographic. Archived from the original on August 15, 2010. Retrieved 29 August 2010.
  11. ^ "Saving Species With Sound: Anti-Poaching Project From Panthera is Saving Jaguars in Central America | Panthera". www.panthera.org. Retrieved 2021-03-13.
  12. ^ "A Jaguar Named Hope". Journey of the Jaguar. 2018-06-08. Retrieved 2021-03-13.
  13. ^ "Parceria entre Belgo e Panthera Brasil ajuda a preservar a onça-pintada". Revista Rural (in Brazilian Portuguese). 2021-08-06. Retrieved 2022-09-27.
  14. ^ "Investigación Pumas – Parque Torres del Paine" (in Spanish). Retrieved 2022-09-27.
  15. ^ Watch CBS Mornings: New software helps track, protect big cats - Full show on CBS, retrieved 2022-09-27
  16. ^ "Panthera United States and Canada". Panthera. Retrieved 2022-09-27.
  17. ^ "Conservationists Plan Genetic Tiger Corridor Across Asia". Big Cat Rescue. 2008-02-17. Retrieved 2022-09-28.
  18. ^ "Tigers bring political foes together". Mizzima. Burma. August 6, 2010. Retrieved 29 August 2010.
  19. ^ "First images of spotted leopard captured in Malaysia". phys.org. Retrieved 2022-09-28.
  20. ^ "Gale - Product Login". galeapps.gale.com. Retrieved 2022-09-28.
  21. ^ Seidensticker, John (1 November 2008). "A Place for Tigers – Review of Life in the Valley of Death: The Fight to Save Tigers in a Land of Guns, Gold, and Greed, by Alan Rabinowitz Alan. Island Press. Washington, DC. 248 pp., ISBN 9781597261296, cloth". BioScience. 58 (10): 990–991. doi:10.1641/B581014. S2CID 84219640.
  22. ^ . Treehugger/Discovery Channel. 2010-04-24. Archived from the original on 2010-04-28. Retrieved 2010-05-22.
  23. ^ Noras, Sibylle (March 8, 2010). "Sad end". Saving Snow Leopards. Retrieved 2022-09-28.
  24. ^ a b "Snow Leopard". Panthera. Retrieved 2022-09-28.
  25. ^ "Engagement Communities to Safeguard Rural Livelihoods and Cultivate Conservation Partnerships in Kyrgyzstan". www.cepf.net. Retrieved 2022-09-28.
  26. ^ Shaer, Matthew. "Hunters Become Conservationists in the Fight to Protect the Snow Leopard". Smithsonian Magazine. Retrieved 2022-09-28.
  27. ^ "Supporting Tajikistan to lead on Transboundary Cooperation on Snow Leopards | CMS". www.cms.int. Retrieved 2022-09-28.
  28. ^ "$20 million deal signed to save Arabian leopard population". Arab News. 2019-06-09. Retrieved 2022-09-28.
  29. ^ MacGregor, Sandra. "Discover 5 Under-The-Radar Destinations For Tigers, Pumas, Jaguars And Leopards". Forbes. Retrieved 2022-09-28.
  30. ^ "Greater Kafue". Zambian Carnivore Program. Retrieved 2022-09-28.
  31. ^ "Wilderness Safaris and Panthera offer a chance to track lions in Zambia: Travel Weekly". www.travelweekly.com. Retrieved 2022-09-28.
  32. ^ "Cheetah". Panthera. Retrieved 2022-09-28.
  33. ^ "No longer extinct: returning lions to Gabon". Lion Recovery Fund. Retrieved 2022-09-28.
  34. ^ . Animals. 2022-06-28. Archived from the original on June 28, 2022. Retrieved 2022-09-28.
  35. ^ "Group Saving Endangered Lions Helps Lioness Remove Porcupine Quills: 'Probably Saved Her Life'". Peoplemag. Retrieved 2022-09-28.
  36. ^ "Furs for Life and the Panthera Faux Furs Program". Wildlife ACT. 2017-06-15. Retrieved 2022-09-28.
  37. ^ "Furs for Life". Panthera. Retrieved 2022-09-28.
  38. ^ Yandell, Inga (2015-03-20). "Furs For Life Give Leopards New Hope". Earth Endeavours. Retrieved 2022-09-28.
  39. ^ Van Rooyen, Lesa (2020-12-21). "Hope for the world's most persecuted large cat". Peace Parks Foundation. Retrieved 2022-09-28.
  40. ^ Lazarus, Sarah. "Digital designers create replica leopard furs for ceremonial wear in southern Africa". CNN. Retrieved 2022-09-28.

External links edit

  • Official website
  • Panthera's channel on YouTube.
  • Leopard Spotted
  • Mes Del Jaguar

panthera, corporation, panthera, charitable, organization, devoted, preserving, wild, cats, their, ecosystems, around, globe, founded, 2006, panthera, devoted, conservation, world, species, wild, cats, vast, ecosystems, they, inhabit, their, team, biologists, . Panthera Corporation or Panthera is a charitable organization devoted to preserving wild cats and their ecosystems around the globe Founded in 2006 Panthera is devoted to the conservation of the world s 40 species of wild cats and the vast ecosystems they inhabit Their team of biologists data scientists law enforcement experts and wild cat advocates studies and protects the seven species of big cats cheetahs jaguars leopards lions pumas snow leopards and tigers 1 2 Panthera also creates targeted conservation strategies for the world s most threatened and overlooked small cats such as fishing cats ocelots and Andean cats The organization has offices in New York City and Europe as well as offices in Mesoamerica South America Africa and Asia PantheraFounded2006FoundersThomas S KaplanAlan RabinowitzTypeNon profit organizationTax ID no 20 4668756FocusDevelops implements and oversees range wide species conservation strategiesHeadquartersNew York CityArea servedWorld wideCEOFrederic LaunayBoard of directorsJonathan Ayers Frederic Launay Thomas S Kaplan Ross J Beaty Joshua Fink Lieutenant General Sir Graeme Lamb Duncan McFarland Hon Claudia A McMurray H E Razan Khalifa Al Mubarak H H Prince Badr bin Abdullah Al Saud Robert QuartermainKey peopleJoe Smith Guy Balme John Goodrich Howard Quigley Kim Young Overton Philipp Henschel Mark Elbroch Wai Ming Wong Gareth Mann Byron WeckworthWebsitehttps www panthera org Contents 1 Programs and grants 2 Founders and leadership 2 1 Board members 3 Projects 3 1 South and Central America projects 3 2 United States projects 3 3 Asia and Middle East projects 3 4 Africa projects 4 See also 5 Notes 6 External linksPrograms and grants editPanthera works in partnership with local and international NGOs scientific institutions corporate partner and government agencies to develop and implement range wide species conservation strategies It has funded the Wildlife Conservation Research Unit at Oxford University with a diploma program in international wildlife practice 2 The organization also awards a number of grants to support promising field conservationists These grant programs include the Kaplan Graduate Awards the Research and Conservation Grants the Small Cat Action Fund the Sabin Snow Leopard Grant Program and the Winston Cobb Memorial Fellowships 1 Founders and leadership editPanthera was co founded by American scientist Alan Rabinowitz and American entrepreneur Thomas S Kaplan who formerly served as Chairman of Panthera s Board of Trustees succeeded in 2021 by Jonathan Ayers 3 Kaplan currently is Chairman of The Global Alliance for Wild Cats 4 Rabinowitz was the first President and CEO from 2001 until 2017 when he was succeeded by French scientist Fred Launay 5 Dr Rabinowitz helped establish the world s first jaguar preserve in 1986 in Belize 6 and was the main driving force behind the Jaguar Corridor that connects jaguar populations across its range from Mexico to Argentina 2 John Goodrich leads Panthera s Tiger Program and serves as Chief Scientist Kim Young Overton serves as Director of Panthera s Cheetah Program and Gareth Mann is Director of Panthera s Leopard Program Additionally Byron Weckworth is the Director of the Snow Leopard Program Wai Ming Wong is Director of the Small Cats Program and Mark Elbroch is the Director of the Puma Program Howard Quigley joined the organization in 2009 7 and is currently the Director of its Jaguar Program Board members edit Jonathan Ayers board chair and former chairman and CEO of IDEXX Laboratories 8 Frederic Launay Ph D President and CEO of Panthera and former presidential advisor of IUCN Thomas S Kaplan Ph D founder and Global Alliance chair Ross J Beaty C M benefactor of the Beaty Biodiversity Museum Joshua Fink Lieutenant General Sir Graeme Lamb KBE CMG DSO Duncan McFarland director of New Profit Inc Hon Claudia A McMurray H E Razan Khalifa Al Mubarak HH Prince Badr bin Abdullah Al Saud Robert QuartermainProjects editSouth and Central America projects edit In South America Mesoamerica and Mexico Panthera is developing a transnational corridor to help protect the jaguar Jaguar survival and health depends on a network of corridors that span the continent while past efforts focused on developing distinct sanctuaries 9 It is the jaguar s ability to travel long distances that prevents inbreeding and consequent extinction In August 2010 in Belize it worked with the government to create the Labouring Creek Jaguar Corridor Wildlife Sanctuary with more than 7 000 acres 28 km of land The project is part of the Panthera Jaguar Corridor Initiative 10 In Costa Rica it is researching the routes that jaguars travel and encouraging politicians and developers to respect those routes They are also sponsoring community outreach programs to alleviate jaguar conflict issues 9 In Mesoamerica and North America Panthera also works in Mexico Guatemala 11 Honduras 12 and Nicaragua in addition to its ongoing work in Belize and Costa Rica In early 2010 Panthera signed a deal with the Colombian government to protect and develop the area where the Central and South American jaguar corridors converge in Colombia In Brazil Panthera manages Fazenda Jofre Velho 13 one of the most important research bases in the Pantanal They are working with local ranchers to find benign ways to protect their cattle rather than the typical approach of shooting the jaguars 6 Panthera s South American puma initiatives are focused in Chile Working with their partner the Fundacion Cerro Guido Conservacion 14 they are exploring various methods to enhance the peaceful coexistence between pumas and sheep including protective Maremma and Pirineos sheepdogs Foxlights and supporting puma ecotourism United States projects edit Panthera also works to protect pumas and small cats across the Americas In the Northwest their Olympic Cougar Project represents an important and exciting partnership between Panthera and six indigenous tribes led by the Lower Elwha Klallam Tribe to study and protect pumas in the dense coniferous forests glacier clad mountains and rugged coastlines of Washington s stunning Olympic Peninsula 15 Previously Panthera s puma initiatives in the United States were focused in Wyoming In the Northeast U S Panthera also runs the New York Millfarm Bobcat Project 16 to understand bobcat ecology in an eastern rural landscape and use this information to develop a replicable monitoring protocol to inform bobcat management plans in New York State and other States along the eastern coast Asia and Middle East projects edit In Asia Panthera s Tigers Forever project is planning a 5 000 mile 8 000 km long corridor from Bhutan to Myanmar for wild tiger populations The corridor would also include land in northeast India Thailand and Malaysia and possibly Laos Cambodia and Vietnam 17 Panthera works in India and has increased tiger numbers in Manas National Park Additionally further east in August 2010 the government of Myanmar announced the expansion by 4 248 square miles 11 000 km of the Hukawng Valley Tiger Reserve the world s largest tiger preserve Panthera CEO Alan Rabinowitz helped bring together representatives from the Kachin Independence Army and the Myanmar government to make the expansion possible 18 In Johor State Malaysia Panthera is working with the state government and the Wildlife Conservation Society to increase tiger numbers by 50 over a ten year period As part of that project in early 2010 Panthera cameras captured an image of a rare spotted leopard in Taman Negara National Park and Endau Rompin National Park where only black leopards were believed to exist 19 Panthera also works in Thailand to protect wild cats including tigers and fishing cats and in Malaysian Borneo to study the five species of small cats that inhabit Sabah In August 2010 the government of Burma announced the expansion by 4 248 square miles 11 000 km2 of the Hukawng Valley Tiger Reserve the world s largest tiger preserve Panthera CEO Alan Rabinowitz helped bring together representatives from the Kachin Independence Army and the Burma government to make the expansion possible 20 21 In Johor State Malaysia Panthera is working with the state government and the Wildlife Conservation Society to increase tiger numbers by 50 over a ten year period As part of that project in early 2010 Panthera cameras captured an image of a rare spotted leopard in Taman Negara National Park and Endau Rompin National Park where only black leopards were believed to exist 22 Panthera s Snow Leopard Program is studying the species in Mongolia and surveying new regions where the animals are likely to live but have not yet been discovered They work with local animal herders to train them in new approaches that will reduce livestock lost to the leopards They are also working at protection for the estimated 3 500 to 7 000 snow leopards in Central Asia Programs include giving a bonus to Mongolian herding communities that have gone one year without killing a snow leopard and livestock vaccinations in Pakistan where loss to disease is greater than leopard depredation 23 24 Panthera s Snow Leopard Program has studied the species in Mongolia and surveyed new regions where the animals are likely to live but have not yet been discovered 24 They are also working to protect snow leopards in Central Asia including in Kyrgyzstan and Tajikistan 25 26 27 Panthera s work in the Middle East focuses on the Arabian Peninsula With the support provided by the Royal Commission for AlUla RCU there is a strong focus on leopards and specifically on restoring and conserving leopards in the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia KSA 28 Africa projects edit Panthera works across the African continent In South Africa the Sabi Sands protected area bordering the Kruger National Park is a long term leopard research site and one of Panthera s flagship projects The knowledge generated from this work is critical to informing local wildlife management and broader conservation policy across the leopard range 29 Within Zambia Panthera project sites are focused in the Greater Kafue Ecosystem GKE 30 They currently support 17 anti poaching teams two dedicated lion monitoring and protection teams and one leopard monitoring team across Kafue National Park and surrounding Game Management Areas 31 Panthera s Cheetah Program has also GPS collared cheetahs in the park 32 Panthera also has project sites elsewhere across southern Africa including in Zimbabwe and Angola Since 2010 Panthera has collaborated with Agence Nationale des Parcs Nationaux ANPN Gabon s National Park Agency to monitor wildlife in Plateaux Bateke National Park where a lone male lion was spotted on a camera trap Panthera Gabon is currently working on a countrywide leopard survey and helping the Gabonese government and ANPN identify gazelle wildlife movement corridors in order to secure and connect populations 33 Over the past decade Panthera has built a strong working relationship with the government of Senegal formalized through a long term agreement with the Department of National Parks to strengthen park management and security in Niokolo Koba National Park 34 They provide direct support to ranger teams for effective large scale patrols the rebuilding and expansion of the park s infrastructure and intensive ecological monitoring including monitoring of lions using GPS satellite collars 35 Panthera also works on initiatives in southern Africa that provide synthetic wild cat furs to communities in place of traditional garb 36 They work with the Barotse Royal Establishment of the Lozi People in Zambia Saving Spots Initiative and the Nazareth Baptist Church eBuhleni known as the Shembe Church in South Africa Furs for Life Initiative in this capacity 37 38 More than 18 500 synthetic capes have already been distributed to the Shembe Church 39 40 and synthetic garb was provided to the Lozi people during the traditional Kuomboka Festival in 2022 See also editRewilding conservation biology Conservation science biology Conservation status Panthera Camera traps GPS animal tracking Tigers Lions Puma Snow Leopard Leopard Jaguar Cheetah Small catsNotes edit a b Panthera Partners in Wild Cat Conservation Retrieved 22 May 2010 a b c Davidson Max 2009 08 11 Tom Kaplan I have big plans for big cats The Telegraph Archived from the original on 2009 08 14 Retrieved 2016 08 05 Jonathan Ayers to chair Panthera board of directors animalhealthdigest com Retrieved 2022 09 27 World s Small Wild Cats Get A Major Conservation Boost WorldAtlas 2021 03 22 Retrieved 2022 09 27 Panthera Appoints Dr Frederic Launay to Lead the Global Wild Cat Conservation Organization Succeeding Dr Alan Rabinowitz As CEO Panthera Retrieved 2022 09 27 a b Di Paola Mike 2009 06 29 Slaughtered Jaguars Link New York Doctors Brazilian Ranchers Bloomberg Retrieved 22 May 2010 Howard Quigley Ph D Panthera Retrieved 2022 09 27 The Giving Pledge Welcomes 14 New Signatories Panthera Access February 7 2023 a b Rosenthal Elisabeth 2010 05 11 To Help Jaguars Survive Ease Their Commute New York Times Retrieved 2016 08 05 Braun David August 10 2010 Belize sets aside land for jaguar corridor National Geographic Archived from the original on August 15 2010 Retrieved 29 August 2010 Saving Species With Sound Anti Poaching Project From Panthera is Saving Jaguars in Central America Panthera www panthera org Retrieved 2021 03 13 A Jaguar Named Hope Journey of the Jaguar 2018 06 08 Retrieved 2021 03 13 Parceria entre Belgo e Panthera Brasil ajuda a preservar a onca pintada Revista Rural in Brazilian Portuguese 2021 08 06 Retrieved 2022 09 27 Investigacion Pumas Parque Torres del Paine in Spanish Retrieved 2022 09 27 Watch CBS Mornings New software helps track protect big cats Full show on CBS retrieved 2022 09 27 Panthera United States and Canada Panthera Retrieved 2022 09 27 Conservationists Plan Genetic Tiger Corridor Across Asia Big Cat Rescue 2008 02 17 Retrieved 2022 09 28 Tigers bring political foes together Mizzima Burma August 6 2010 Retrieved 29 August 2010 First images of spotted leopard captured in Malaysia phys org Retrieved 2022 09 28 Gale Product Login galeapps gale com Retrieved 2022 09 28 Seidensticker John 1 November 2008 A Place for Tigers Review of Life in the Valley of Death The Fight to Save Tigers in a Land of Guns Gold and Greed by Alan Rabinowitz Alan Island Press Washington DC 248 pp ISBN 9781597261296 cloth BioScience 58 10 990 991 doi 10 1641 B581014 S2CID 84219640 CRare Spotted Leopard Photographed for First Time in Malaysian National Park Treehugger Discovery Channel 2010 04 24 Archived from the original on 2010 04 28 Retrieved 2010 05 22 Noras Sibylle March 8 2010 Sad end Saving Snow Leopards Retrieved 2022 09 28 a b Snow Leopard Panthera Retrieved 2022 09 28 Engagement Communities to Safeguard Rural Livelihoods and Cultivate Conservation Partnerships in Kyrgyzstan www cepf net Retrieved 2022 09 28 Shaer Matthew Hunters Become Conservationists in the Fight to Protect the Snow Leopard Smithsonian Magazine Retrieved 2022 09 28 Supporting Tajikistan to lead on Transboundary Cooperation on Snow Leopards CMS www cms int Retrieved 2022 09 28 20 million deal signed to save Arabian leopard population Arab News 2019 06 09 Retrieved 2022 09 28 MacGregor Sandra Discover 5 Under The Radar Destinations For Tigers Pumas Jaguars And Leopards Forbes Retrieved 2022 09 28 Greater Kafue Zambian Carnivore Program Retrieved 2022 09 28 Wilderness Safaris and Panthera offer a chance to track lions in Zambia Travel Weekly www travelweekly com Retrieved 2022 09 28 Cheetah Panthera Retrieved 2022 09 28 No longer extinct returning lions to Gabon Lion Recovery Fund Retrieved 2022 09 28 Inside the race to save West Africa s endangered lions Animals 2022 06 28 Archived from the original on June 28 2022 Retrieved 2022 09 28 Group Saving Endangered Lions Helps Lioness Remove Porcupine Quills Probably Saved Her Life Peoplemag Retrieved 2022 09 28 Furs for Life and the Panthera Faux Furs Program Wildlife ACT 2017 06 15 Retrieved 2022 09 28 Furs for Life Panthera Retrieved 2022 09 28 Yandell Inga 2015 03 20 Furs For Life Give Leopards New Hope Earth Endeavours Retrieved 2022 09 28 Van Rooyen Lesa 2020 12 21 Hope for the world s most persecuted large cat Peace Parks Foundation Retrieved 2022 09 28 Lazarus Sarah Digital designers create replica leopard furs for ceremonial wear in southern Africa CNN Retrieved 2022 09 28 External links editOfficial website Panthera s channel on YouTube Leopard Spotted Mes Del Jaguar Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Panthera Corporation amp oldid 1192834730, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.