Thursday, May 28, 2009

Big Cats in Brazil


Article Date: April 3rd, 2009

Source: Time

Chapter: 5- Climate and Terrestrial Biodiversity, 9- Human Population

Region: Local (in Brazil)

Summary: A growing human population in Brazilian wetlands is putting pressure on important animals and ecosystems found in this region. Especially affected are large predators such as the South American Jaguar, which is experiencing a dramatic population decline from its already endangered numbers. Farmers in this region will often shoot the jaguars to prevent the loss of livestock, much like American farmers out west kill coyotes and wolves to protect their herds. Recognizing the fact that it is impossible to separate the habitats used by people and cats, organizations are focusing more on ways of helping the large cats and the people to coexist in their environment. One group, Panthera, is offering medical services and building schools for communities that reside in big cat habitats, and in turn hopes to help locals learn the importance of these large predators, and hopefully learn ways of preventing the deaths of their livestock without killing the cats. This approach is unique because it is trying to encourage both human health AND the wellbeing of cat populations in the ecosystem.

My Position: I think this is a wonderful program, and hope to see more like it in the future. I like that instead of just passing laws to prevent the killings, this organization is trying to help educate local farmers to the plight of the jaguars, and in this way I think they can be more successful than previous conservation efforts. Because the people have something to gain from peacefully coexisting with the jaguars, it is more likely that they will be able to ammend their lifestyles in order to acchieve this, and hopefully the results will also last long into the future.

Vocabulary: pathogen: any disease-producing agent, esp. a virus, bacterium, or other microorganism.



Getting People to Coexist with Cats
By Bryan Walsh
As the human population has grown in the Pantanal, the vast wetland in central Brazil, people and big cats — namely the South American jaguar — are encroaching increasingly on each other's territory. When conflict occurs, as it inevitably does, the cats are usually the ones who lose.
From the distance of a magazine story or a National Geographic special, it can be hard to understand why anyone would want to kill the very beautiful, very endangered jaguar. But if you're a Brazilian cattle farmer whose cows keep getting eaten by jaguars, the killing makes a little more sense. (See pictures of 10 species on the brink.)
This is the kind of situation to which conservationists might have responded by cordoning off protected habitats and reserves — building a fence, in effect, between the wild animals and the people. But in the Pantanal, and in much of the rest of our once wild, once underpopulated world, total separation is simply not a sustainable option. That's especially true for jaguars and other big cats, which need a lot of room to roam, far more than could be fenced off. "The big cats' territory is crossing over to the human landscape," says Alan Rabinowitz, a renowned conservationist and the president of the new wildlife group Panthera. "At its root, we have to get people to be able to live with the big cats."
That's why Panthera, whose conservation efforts focus exclusively on endangered cats like jaguars and tigers, will be launching an innovative program in the Brazilian Pantanal this summer. The program will be carried out jointly with New York City's Mt. Sinai Medical School, and will involve a unique exchange of services that includes conservation, health care and disease research. Mt. Sinai's medical students and researchers will come to Panthera's 270-sq.-mi. (700-sq.-km) Pantanal ranch (which includes a jaguar habitat), where they will give free medical care to locals. That care, along with a free school that will be built for local children, will come under Panthera's banner, and the hope is that Brazilians will learn to appreciate both the medical care and the conservation work for jaguars. "People are given better schools and better health care, and the connection between the two is made," says Rabinowitz. (See TIME's special report on extinction.)
For Mt. Sinai, which has made global health a priority for its medical students, the Panthera project presents an opportunity to explore another consequence of the increasing proximity of animals and people: zoonotic diseases, which can pass back and forth between wildlife and human beings. Several major human diseases have originated in animals, including Ebola (which began among primates in Africa) and avian influenza (which started in wild and domestic birds in Southeast Asia, but has also infected big cats).
As human beings, wild animals and domestic animals begin to live in closer and closer to one another, the chance of pathogens jumping — and amplifying — between species will only increase. Sinai's researchers will be able to monitor the population in the Pantanal for zoonotic diseases, providing a needed early warning system for new and emerging pathogens. It will also be a valuable learning experience for Mt. Sinai's students. "We see a really close interface between the health of human populations and conservation efforts," says Paul Klotman, chairman of the department of medicine at Mt. Sinai. "This will allow us to do surveillance to look for potential pathogens that could be important for both wildlife and people."
The Panthera-Mt. Sinai collaboration is atypical, but not for long; it is the shape of things to come for conservation work around the world. Critics who accuse environmentalists like Rabinowitz of protecting animals at the expense of human well-being have got it wrong. Wildlife experts are aware that in a world of 6.7 billion people and counting, the only conservation efforts that have potential — and the only plans that will be truly sustainable — are those that benefit people as much as lions, tigers and bears. "Big cats won't survive unless people want to live with them," says Rabinowitz. "You have to show how they can benefit." In the 58,000-sq.-mi. (150,000-sq.-km) Brazilian Pantanal, there should be room enough for both.

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