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Plant a forest for leopards!

Picture copyright WWF-UK

A fabulously exciting project is underway in the deep forests of Russia.

WWF-RU has kicked off the ‘Plant a forest for leopards’ project, where 1 000 000 Korean pine seedlings will be planted in the southwest area of Primorye. According to my friend who’s volunteering over there, 150 000 trees have already been planted for the Amur leopard – only 40 of these big cats still exist in the wild. According to WWF-RU, this campaign will be the largest action taken on reforestation of forest habit of the rarest cat on the planet.

How to help

The project is still looking for volunteers, so if you’re Russian or planning a slightly different kind of volunteer trip this summer, visit WWF-RU [click here] and contact one of the following coordinators:

Denis Smirnov, Leading Forest Projects Coordinator (WWF Russia Far – Eastern Branch),
tel/fax: +7 (4232) 41-48-68, e-mail
Elena Starostina, Press-officer (WWF Russia Far – Eastern Branch),
tel/fax: +7 (4232) 41-48-68, e-mail
Citybank have already provided funds for the seedlings, but if you wish to contribute towards more seedlings, look no further than the Tigers Need Trees project [click here] at WWF-UK where a donation of £10 plants 330 trees – 3p per tree!
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Russian Reality: In Search of the Tiger

Update: Now featured in Razz My Berries University of Exeter arts magazine, yippee! [click here] (:

There was an eerie silence in the wintry Russian air as we slowly assembled on the side of the empty road, jostling and peering over each other’s heads at our Olga. She stood quietly, waiting for our whispers to die down. She was our translator for this second day journeying across eastern Russia. An hour prior to this, we had been exploring a nature reserve, where we had examined fir trees and snowy pawprints of leopards in the vain hope that they would convey to us the secrets of the mystical Siberian Tiger. Now, our coach had stopped here, in the most unimaginable of locations.

This road seemed no place for tigers and their prints. There was nowhere to go; no trodden pathways, no complicated Russian nature reserve signs. No birds were singing. The road stretched on into the never-ending distance. Someone leaned towards me and asked quietly, “why have we stopped here?”. Our police escorts on the other side of the road stopped talking, and watched us keenly.

Somehow, it felt colder here.

“This,” Olga began, “is a popular crossing for wildlife here in this area. The deer cross over here, and the wild cats, and the leopards. Tigers cross here too.” She paused to listen to the next part of our guide’s speech, and slowly I could see the expressions change on the faces of the few Russians gathered with us.

Slowly, they raised three black-and-white pictures, all of the same image. The photographs seemed to blend into the white of the landscape around us, yet none of us could look away. No Russian weather could match the coldness of what we were seeing.

“This tigress was hit by a car, and knocked to the side of the road, where we are standing now. She was very badly injured. The authorities and the WWF were contacted, but they could not save this tiger, and she died a few hours later.

“The punishments are very harsh here in Russia. If the driver had been found, he would have been faced with a $75,000 fine and a criminal record. A four-month investigation was launched, but we could not find who did this.”

She hesitated, before her final, reverberating sentence. “We cannot put signs up to warn motorists that this is a tiger crossing… it will attract the poachers to this area.” The brutality of this sentence hit home. For once, we could not help to save the tiger. Nothing would attract poachers more than a sign ‘warning’ them that tigers were near.

Somehow, it was all so poignant, so bleak. The tiger did not deserve this. No animal, no living creature, deserved this.

I still recall the biting cold as other delegates in the party began to raise their voices, to argue and question this, to ask whether surely some system could be put in place, some way of slowing down motorists, surely… but Olga and our guides shook their heads sadly. And still this lingering silence continued, relentless, unwielding.

Before we returned to the bus, she said three last words. These are the only words I noted down in my notepad, and yet I still can remember her entire speech on that dark day. One helpless shrug, and three words.

“That’s Russian reality.”

But as I returned to the bus with quiet and sombre thoughts, I knew inside me that these little moments of darkness were the reason for why we were there. We needed to see it, to experience it, in order to tell people, “This is what happened. This is what we will do, to stop it happening again.” We must change people’s minds and people’s hearts, from apathy to change, from helplessness to hope. “Russian reality” can, and will, be reversed, so that we can visit this country and know that, because of us, somewhere in the snowy pawprints and the fir trees, there is a tiger, roaming, breathing, living.

In November 2010, the St Petersburg Tiger Summit was held amongst world leaders, the first summit of its kind. At the same time, I travelled to the other side of the world, to Vladivostok in eastern Russia, in order to represent WWF-UK at the Youth Tiger Summit. WWF held this Summit for us, as youth ambassadors of the 13 tiger-range countries and of the United Kingdom, in order for us to discuss and implement plans of action for the youths of our respective countries. We passed our plans for saving the tiger through a video link to the St Petersburg Tiger Summit, speaking directly to Vladimir Putin (Prime Minister of Russia), Wen Jiabao (Premier of China) and the World Bank leader, Robert Zoellick.

For previously mentioned reasons, the location of this tiger crossing cannot be named. However, the WWF is currently raising funds for a designated project to stop crossings over this road, and to allow them to cross in another safer place. If you wish to help this project, please consider adopting a tiger at the WWF Website, or doubling your donation to tiger conservation by donating to http://new.thebiggive.org.uk/charity/view/5733, and help secure the future of these magnificent animals.

 

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Youth Tiger Summit Youth Appeal

An Appeal by Participants of the International Youth Tiger Forum

We, the youths participating in the International Youth Tiger Forum in Vladivostok, Russia, in this Year of the Tiger, appeal to the world to save the tiger. We represent all 13 tiger range countries (Bangladesh, Bhutan, Cambodia, China, India, Indonesia, Laos, Malaysia, Myanmar, Nepal, Russia, Thailand, and Vietnam) and the United Kingdom.

During these past few days, we have learned more about the plight of the tiger, its decline and the threats facing the species. Not only is the tiger hunted, it is also losing much of its home – the forests.

We know for many of our countries, development is important. However, we do not want development that results in us losing many of the world’s natural wonders and wild species like the tiger. We want our children to be able to inherit a living planet full of the wonders of the natural world.

The tiger knows no political boundaries. For example, tigers from Russia travel to China, and tigers from Nepal frequently cross into India. Likewise, tigers from Laos trespass the border into Vietnam, before wandering into Cambodia.

We therefore call on the governments of the countries that still have tigers in the wild, to urgently unite in efforts to save the tiger and double its numbers in the wild by 2022. Only by swiftly acting together across borders can we reverse the situation and stop the decline of tiger populations.

We also call on the governments of economically developed countries to support national and international programmes on tiger conservation through providing funding and technical support. The conservation of the biggest cat on the planet for future generations is a noble and essential investment. Tigers live in forests rich in biodiversity; therefore, tiger conservation will have immeasurable benefits for overall nature conservation, as well as for the many local communities who rely on these areas for basic needs and ecosystem services such as food, water and timber.

We invite the world’s youths to join us in supporting tiger conservation. Our youth action plans have a role for everybody keen to lend support to the youth tiger conservation movement – from increasing awareness to mobilizing youths to take action; from adopting a green lifestyle to actively volunteering in activities such as replanting of degraded forest areas.

We pledge to continue in our role as Tiger Ambassadors to actively promote activities and mobilize the youths of the world in doing our part to conserve one of the world’s most iconic symbols of biodiversity conservation.

Let us together make this year a turning point for the tiger.

 

Thank you.

 

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