
ADDIS ABABA, Ethiopia, April 20 (UPI) -- Ethiopia will embark on a plan for conservation of three of the country's large carnivores, the cheetah, the wild dog and the lion, conservationists say.
The plans were announced Thursday at the Wildlife Rescue, Conservation and Education Center in Addis Ababa.
The plans -- a Cheetah and Wild Dog Action Plan and a Lion Action Plan -- were developed by the Ethiopian Wildlife Conservation Authority, with input from key NGOs including the Wildlife Conservation Society, Zoological Society of London, Frankfurt Zoological Society and the Born Free Foundation, a WCS release reported.
The cheetah and wild dog plan recognizes the two species have wide overlap in their conservation needs, and both require larger areas than many other carnivore species, areas under threat from agriculture and construction.
Under the plan, cheetah and wild dog conservation would be a factor in land-use planning and implementation.
The action plan for lions is to secure and, where possible, restore sustainable lion populations throughout Ethiopia, recognizing their potential to provide substantial social, cultural, ecological and cultural benefits.
Though African lions are the national symbol of Ethiopia, they are also the principle predator of domestic livestock, and present a risk to human life, so the plan will focus on mitigation of human-lion related conflict.
|
|
|
|
|
|
| Additional Science News Stories | |
ABUJA, Nigeria, May 25 (UPI) --
The Nigerian army says it destroyed camps used by Islamist militants to coordinate attacks against communities in northeastern regions of the country.
|
JAKARTA, May 25 (UPI) --
South Korean pop star Psy will perform in Indonesia at a concert celebrating diplomatic ties between the two countries, his management agency said Saturday.
|
COLOGNE, Germany, May 25 (UPI) --
An Apple-1 computer, which sold for $666 when it debuted in 1976, sold for a record $671,400 Saturday at auction in German, the auctioneer said.
|
WRENSHALL, Minn., May 25 (UPI) --
A woman says she was riding along a trail in northern Minnesota recently when she found herself falling off her horse and the animal slipping into a sink hole.
|
| Stories | Photos | Comments |
View Caption