RT Journal T1 A CASE STUDY OF BEAR REINTRODUCTION IN PAKISTAN: ART AND POLITICS IN CONSERVATION A1 Fakhar-i-Abbas1 A1 Afsar Mian1 A1 Naim Ashraf Raja2 A1 Safdar Shah3 and Jan-Schmidt-Burbach4 JF Journal of Animal and Plant Sciences JO JAPS SN 1018-7081 VO 30 IS 4 SP 860 OP 868 YR 2020 FD 2020/04/25 DO DOI https://doi.org/10.36899/JAPS.2020.4.0101 AB
Bears are Pakistan’s largest terrestrial animals. Conservation status of brown bears is least concerned and black bear is vulnerable in the world, and critically endangered (brown) (Ahmed et.al. 2013: Sheikh and Molur 2004) and threatened in Pakistan. It is reported that roughly 92% of past black bear habitat is now empty or without them. Similarly 30% previously known distribution has now lost its population in Pakistan. Considering the problems this species is facing, a reintroduction plan was organized in which the confiscated bear cubs from poachers were raised in a specialized and least human contact enclosure. Considering regional habitat difficulties, the sites were properly studied and discussed. Due to an appropriate monitoring system, five rehabilitated bears were readied for release in those habitats in the last three years. Monitoring of the released individuals confirmed their survival and success in their adaptation. The first year release was not discussed publicly so complaints or any negative impact was never discussed. Second year release because of the involvement of the country’s prime minister went public. The media itself reported positively. The conservationists unanimously opposed the release for their own reasons. The second released bears were several times reported as poached, road killed, hunted with their parts sold in the market and five times destruction caused by them was reported at an area of our 50,000 square kilometers. This report is being presented with a hope that politics in conservation efforts could be reduced. Silent conservation efforts are more successful for nature but do not aware masses for future motivation and real impact, it is done with loud and clear message the fellow conservationists turn into competitions and they try to fail the efforts.
K1 Asian black bear. Ursus thibetanus. Reintroduction. Rehabilitation. Human wildlife conflict. Bear conservation. Bears population management. Population management. Bears of Pakistan PB Pakistan Agricultural Scientists Forum LK https://thejaps.org.pk/AbstractView.aspx?mid=ZLG-19-0021