New Report on Asiatic Cheetah Population in Iran...
Iranian Cheetah Society Releases Triennial Report For 2021-2023
ICS Participated in First Cheetah Global Summit held...
Khorshid: The Everlasting Hope of Turan
Explorers of Hope Follow the Trail of a...
A Rare Glimpse of a Persian Leopard Hunting
Facebook Linkedin Twitter Youtube Instagram Telegram
  • Home
  • Projects
    • Asiatic Cheetah Monitoring Population
    • Explorers of Hope
    • Rangers Program
    • Water For Cheetahs
  • Who We Are
    • About Us
    • Executive Team
    • Partner Organizations
    • International Donors of 2023
  • Species
    • Asiatic Cheetah
  • News
    • News Archive
    • Press Room
    • Subscribe to Newsletter
  • Download
    • Asiatic Cheetah Population Monitoring Report (2021-2023)
    • 2021-2023 Triennial Activity Report
    • 2019-2020 Biannual Report
    • 2018 report
    • Asiatic Cheetah Infographic
  • Contact
  • DONATE
  • فارسی
Menu
  • Home
  • Projects
    • Asiatic Cheetah Monitoring Population
    • Explorers of Hope
    • Rangers Program
    • Water For Cheetahs
  • Who We Are
    • About Us
    • Executive Team
    • Partner Organizations
    • International Donors of 2023
  • Species
    • Asiatic Cheetah
  • News
    • News Archive
    • Press Room
    • Subscribe to Newsletter
  • Download
    • Asiatic Cheetah Population Monitoring Report (2021-2023)
    • 2021-2023 Triennial Activity Report
    • 2019-2020 Biannual Report
    • 2018 report
    • Asiatic Cheetah Infographic
  • Contact
  • DONATE
  • فارسی
Search
Close this search box.
Tag:

Local Communities

Leopard Program

Cooperation between Qazvin’s DOE and ICS in order to decease the Human-wildlife conflicts

by pourmir September 15, 2021
written by pourmir 1 minutes read

ICS and Qazvin’s DOE had signed an agreement in order to study the conflicts between humans and wildlife in the Tarom Sofla area. Identifying solutions and also propose management methods to decrease these conflicts are the aims of this agreement.

Persian Leopard Conservation in Tarom

Interview with local people


According to Qazvin’s DOE report, the ICS’s scientific and practical capacities were considered in solving these conflicts in the Tarom Sofla area. Identification type and impact of conflicts of wildlife on human life in the area, finding the reason for these conflicts, determine the priority of damages which were made by wildlife for human life, determine the solutions to decrease these conflicts with the help of locals and etc, are the purpose of ICS’s activity in the conservation area of the Tarom Sofla in 2021.
The conservation area of the Tarom Sofla is a good conservation habitat for Iranian leopards. Also, there are other spices like brown bear, lynx, wild goat in the area.

September 15, 2021 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Asiatic Cheetah Conservation ProgramWater for Cheetahs Project

Local herder engaged through the “Water for Cheetahs” campaign, spotted two Asiatic cheetahs

by pourmir October 9, 2018
written by pourmir 1 minutes read

In 2015, our team launched a campaign to provide water for Asiatic cheetahs and their natural prey in Miandasht Wildlife Refuge in North Khorasan Province. Because of excessive livestock grazing and a prolonged drought, local rangers used to spend a significant portion of their working hours supplying water for artificial water sites (‘wildlife drinkers’) inside Miandasht, which, in turn, negatively affected their anti-poaching patrolling of the reserve. Through the “Water for Cheetahs” campaign, the Iranian Cheetah Society (ICS) has been able to raise funding to enroll a local herder to assist Miandasht rangers in the water provision for wildlife.

On July 23rd, 2018, the local wildlife authority reported that this local assistant has spotted two adult Asiatic cheetahs near one of the artificial wildlife drinkers. Miandasht is believed to support one of the last two viable cheetah sub-populations in Iran. Thanks to private donors and our partner organization World Land Trust, we have been able to continue the “Water for Cheetahs” campaign in 2018. Learn about how you can help us to continue this work in here.

October 9, 2018 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Capacity Building

Community Based Solutions to Mitigate Human-Leopard Conflict in North of Iran

by مدیر سایت February 19, 2014
written by مدیر سایت 2 minutes read

At the end of “Capacity building of local communities to conserve Persian leopard in the Caucasus eco-region” project, a basket of solutions was designed to mitigate human- leopard conflict.

This basket contains solutions proposed by local people addressing the main roots of cattle depredation by leopard or other reasons caused damage to cattle in the target villages of project.

  • Ways to improve the care of cattle in the forest

In these villages cattle are driven out of village for grazing in the forest and are often attacked by leopard, because herders do not have enough time to be with them. Therefore, it suggested that several families graze their cattle together intermittently so fewer herder are needed to be with cattle every day and cattle are less attacked by leopard. On the other hand, most of losses occur in the farm seasons that families are very busy. Accordingly, giving cattle during rice farming seasons to a person who stay with cattle in the forest is another solution that will be often paid by rice production.

  • Keeping hybrid cattle instead of natives

Replacing existing cattle with hybrid type with higher meat and milk productivity, which can be kept mostly within corals, rather than pasturing in remote forests is the way to mitigate cattle loses by leopard or other probably damage.

Due to the high cost of buying hybrid cattle, the Artificial insemination of native cattle to have hybrid cattle is another considerable suggested solution.

  • Diversifying livelihood

When “the issue of cattle depredation” was analyzed with details, it was found that herding income is not sufficient for herders to spend fulltime on the care of cattle. So the possibility to launch a new job instead of herding or as a job opportunity in the forestwill lead in reducing the current conflict with leopard or help herders to spend more time on herding. Some of the desired are: mushroom production, beekeeping and worm compost.

  • Compensatory solution

In addition to the suggested solutions for the prevention of cattle losses, sharing enough information about existing livestock insurance program was proposed by local people asthe way to compensate financial losses.

 In the last number of Dorfak Newsletter the possible ways of implementing these solutions were described through interviewing with local people who have successful experience in each of mentioned solutions. This basket with a diversity of solution provides the opportunity for each family to implement the most appropriate solution/s based on their complicated livelihood.

 

February 19, 2014 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Festivals & ConferencesICS News

Herders Who Did Not Kill Cheetahs

by مدیر سایت November 21, 2013
written by مدیر سایت 2 minutes read

As you may remember, just a few weeks, a national conference was held in Iran by the Iranian Cheetah Society (ICS) in order to acknowledge tremendous efforts of 18 Cheetah Guardian working hardly to secure the cheetah ranges across Iran. While the event was quite successful to raise public attention through vast media coverage; however, another two persons were also highlighted in the ceremony which were actually lost in media. They were two herders, who lost their livestock to the cheetahs and the leopards in two different locations in the country. Mojtaba Ilkhani and Pourdel Nezhadravari, both witnessed the predators on their killed animals, but rather than trying to kill them using a shotgun or existing pesticide poisons, they immediately reported the case to Department of Environment game guard to inspect the situation. There is an established compensation program in Iran managed by the DoE; however, long bureaucratical process and financial constraints both have challenged its success.

Therefore, they were invited to the cheetah conference by the ICS to receive a remarkable financial incentive besides being acknowledged by the DoE’s head due to considering law. Furthermore, they are also invited to the ICS projects to share their expertise and to collaborate in field works aiming to protect the cheetahs in the country.

However, nobody can expect all local people to report their loss which sometimes can be substantial to their ivelihood whenever they encounter big cats. In recent years, a few cheetahs have been killed due to conflict cases. Therefore, while protecting of the reserves to sustain natural prey population can be essential to prevent conflict cases, but compensation programs need a crucial revision in Iran, if any conservation outcome is expected from allocating the money to losers. In the meantime, herders have high level of experience within the habitats, so their knowledge can be shared through involving them in conservation and monitoring efforts.

      
November 21, 2013 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail

Help us save the Asiatic cheetah from extinction


Latest News

  • New Report on Asiatic Cheetah Population in Iran Released
  • Iranian Cheetah Society Releases Triennial Report For 2021-2023
  • ICS Participated in First Cheetah Global Summit held in Ethiopia
  • Khorshid: The Everlasting Hope of Turan
  • Explorers of Hope Follow the Trail of a Cheetah in a Rural Area

Contact Us

Postal Address: P.O.Box 14155-8549, Tehran, Iran
Office: Unit 2, Number 3, Jomhouri Ave, Tehran, Tehran Province
Whatsapp: +98 (935) 2450054
Email:
info[at]wildlife[dot]ir

Facebook Linkedin Twitter Youtube Instagram Telegram
Proudly Hosted By Parspack Servers

Latest News

New Report on Asiatic Cheetah Population in Iran Released

Iranian Cheetah Society Releases Triennial Report on Wildlife Conservation and Asiatic Cheetah Conservation

Iranian Cheetah Society Releases Triennial Report For 2021-2023

Iranian Cheetah Society team with the Laurie Marker from CCF

ICS Participated in First Cheetah Global Summit held in Ethiopia

Asiatic Cheetah cubs, Khorshid Family

Khorshid: The Everlasting Hope of Turan

Partners

Iranian Cheetah Society
  • Home
  • Projects
    • Asiatic Cheetah Monitoring Population
    • Explorers of Hope
    • Rangers Program
    • Water For Cheetahs
  • Who We Are
    • About Us
    • Executive Team
    • Partner Organizations
    • International Donors of 2023
  • Species
    • Asiatic Cheetah
  • News
    • News Archive
    • Press Room
    • Subscribe to Newsletter
  • Download
    • Asiatic Cheetah Population Monitoring Report (2021-2023)
    • 2021-2023 Triennial Activity Report
    • 2019-2020 Biannual Report
    • 2018 report
    • Asiatic Cheetah Infographic
  • Contact
  • DONATE
  • فارسی