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Wire snare removal in protected areas is labor-intensive but effective -- and essential to solving the Southeast Asian snaring crisis

Snaring a non-selective method of poaching using wire traps is widespread in tropical forests in Southeast Asia. Snaring decimates wildlife populations and has pushed many larger mammals to local or even global extinction. Eleven years of data from ranger patrols in the Thua Thien Hue and Quang Nam Saola Nature Reserves in Viet Nam show that intensive removal efforts are labour-intensive and costly but brought snaring down by almost 40 percent and therefore reduced imminent threats to wildlife. Further reductions were difficult to achieve despite continued removal efforts. Snare removal is therefore necessary but by itself not sufficient to save the threatened wildlife diversity in tropical forests, scientists conclude.

Nature Got a More Prominent Place at the Table at COP28

Rediscovered After 60 Years: The Bizarre Egg-Laying Mammal of the Cyclops Mountains

An international team rediscovered the rare Attenborough's long-beaked echidna in Indonesia, also uncovering new species and a cave system. These findings, achieved with local community collaboration, contribute significantly to biodiversity and geological research. A long-beaked echidna named

Snares don t discriminate: A problem for wild cats, both big and small

In 2019, researchers declared the Indochinese tiger extinct in Laos as widespread snaring in Nam Et-Phou Louey National Park picked off the last few individuals of Panthera tigris corbetti. Two years later, scientists found that smaller cat species, such as the clouded leopard (Neofelis nebulosa) and marbled cat (Pardofelis marmorata), were also in decline in […]

Wildlife Surveys Out of Thin Air

Capturing genetic material in water, air, or parasitic blood samples can be used to noninvasively tally the wildlife in an area.

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