Headline: Getting serious about saving the wild
tiger
Date: October 23, 2009
Source: The Hindu
For
too long, conservationists have been able to pit little more than their
passion for nature against the immense power of economic self-interest
that drives nature-destroying development and sustains illegal markets
for vanishing species. It is time for a total reinvention in national
park management, provision of top science and technology to tiger
conservation landscapes, and sustained political will to stop the
bleeding.
Despite more than 30 years of conservation initiatives in the
13 Asian tiger range countries and around the world, tiger numbers have
continued to decline. There were about 35,000 tigers living in Asian
forests in the 1960s -- so few that the tiger was declared endangered
and programmes were begun to protect them and their habitats. Today,
there are no more than about 3,500 of these majestic big cats left. All
of our best efforts -- and there are some tiger conservation initiatives
such as Prime Minister Indira Gandhi’s Project Tiger of the 1970s
-- merely made the downward slope a bit less slippery rather than stem
the tigers’ downfall.
Massive infrastructure development throughout Asia has paved
over much of the tiger’s habitat and threatens to take it all,
with spending on infrastructure in Asia expected to exceed $500 billion
a year. At the same time, growing economic prosperity in Asia, and
especially in China, has fuelled a multi-billion dollar illegal trade in
wildlife with tigers treated as commodities to be traded for enormous
profit, not ecological assets to be sustained.
The
government of Nepal is hosting a Global Tiger Workshop in Kathmandu,
attended by wildlife biologists, conservation practitioners,
representatives of the governments of the tiger range countries and
international organisations, and some new players who have joined to
change the game. The recently formed Global Tiger Initiative, designed
to facilitate and promote cooperative, game changing actions on behalf
of wild tigers is an alliance of governments, civil society, and the
private sector. The World Bank too, led by President Robert Zoellick
himself, is committed to devoting its global presence and convening
power to this endeavour.
The challenge
The
challenge for these experts will be to bring to the table global and
local knowledge, experience, information, technology, and best practices
to develop new strategies to save tigers through devising a robust,
incentive-driven conservation agenda that makes landscapes with tigers
more valuable than those without them.
Understanding that resisting development is not a viable
strategy, the gathering of experts will seek to develop a blueprint for
infrastructure development that is “green” and
tiger-friendly. Experts will need to determine how best to tackle the
illegal trade that has poachers killing at least one tiger every day.
There is an urgent need for enhanced law enforcement and, most
important, a strategy to reduce the demand for tiger parts and products,
including the newly fashionable and repugnant practice of serving dinner
guests tiger meat to signal status.
New
and innovative models of habitat management, such as the recent success
of South Africa’s National Parks Authority to transform national
park management into a biodiversity-friendly business approach that
respects the “people aspect” of conservation, will be
discussed. Local NGOs and communities will need to be empowered to serve
as agents of change. And new ways will need to be found to generate
funds to finance tiger conservation, which at present is woefully
under-funded compared to the magnitude of the challenge at hand.
On
capacity-building, a model GTI partnership launched by the World Bank
and Smithsonian Institution for the establishment of a global
Conservation and Development Practice Network will get under way in
2010. This network will provide a training and professional support
system to improve field conservation and management in tiger range
countries, and will target forest resource managers and senior
policymakers there.
The
GTI, on its part, can be an important instrument to change the way the
world values tigers and the biodiversity they represent. Wildlife
conservation can no longer be treated as a fringe concern we can’t
afford. It must be valued for what it really means to us. If ignored,
the future will be bleak for the billions of people whose lives and
livelihoods depend on the ecological services, from carbon sequestration
to watershed protection, of the forests that remain under the
tiger’s umbrella.
Political commitment
Hopefully the shift is taking place. All of the nations in
which tigers live, from India in the west and Russia in the east, are
meeting in Kathmandu -- an unprecedented expression of regional unity
that reflects the emergence of political commitment to save Asia’s
tigers. Nepalese Prime Minister Madhav Kumar Nepal’s support and
ministerial representation from countries such as Thailand is evidence
of the momentum that is building to get serious about wildlife
conservation and biodiversity protection. With a multilateral framework
and regional protocol for cooperation among the tiger range countries, a
trans-boundary “war on poaching” can help stop the
bleeding.
By
looking at the experience and best practices in tiger range countries
from Russia to Malaysia on what works best and why, a global tiger
recovery road map will begin to take shape. The meeting in Kathmandu
aims to be a useful stepping stone to next year’s Year of the
Tiger Global Tiger Summit, where governments and national and
international organizations will formalise policy changes and commit to
new investment in science and technology to reinvent the conservation
and development paradigm. We must seize this moment at Kathmandu. There
is symbolic importance in the Year of the Tiger, yet the year ahead must
be more than a symbolic effort. It must be remembered as the year we
took steps to save and sustain the tiger.
Excellent opportunity
Although several global meets in the past have not had the
desired impact, Kathmandu offers an excellent opportunity to bring to
the table ‘game-changing’ ideas in wildlife enforcement
mechanisms, community livelihood incentives, innovative park management
and capacity-building programmes, demand reduction, ‘green
infrastructure,’ and new financial mechanisms. As 2010 and the
Year of the Tiger approaches, these ideas and innovations could
represent a new front in the battle to save the wild tiger. To
paraphrase conservationist Marjory Stoneman Douglas, if we win, we get
to keep the planet.
( John Seidensticker is Head of the Conservation
Ecology Centre at the Smithsonian’s National Zoological Park and
Chairman of Save the Tiger Fund Council. Keshav Varma is Programme
Director for the Global Tiger Initiative, based at The World Bank
Institute.)
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