1 / 35

The Role of Ex-Situ Management in the Conservation of Amphibians

The Role of Ex-Situ Management in the Conservation of Amphibians. Kevin Zippel Bob Lacy IUCN/SSC Conservation Breeding Specialist Group. The uncomfortable truth ….

posy
Télécharger la présentation

The Role of Ex-Situ Management in the Conservation of Amphibians

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. The Role of Ex-Situ Management in the Conservation of Amphibians Kevin Zippel Bob Lacy IUCN/SSC Conservation Breeding Specialist Group

  2. The uncomfortable truth … • Although there is much uncertainty, many species of amphibians are at very high of extinction in the wild, and may be lost forever if effective ex situ programs are not initiated very soon. • 100? 500? 1000? 2000? • Precautionary Principle

  3. What is being done? • “... it is morally irresponsible to document amphibian declines and extinctions without also designing and promoting a response to this global crisis.” • … and the ex situ community is responding!

  4. 1990s – DAPTF the declines are real and serious 2004 – GAA results announced we are in an extinction crisis May 2005 – ARAZPA/SEAZA/CBSG August – CBSG convenes planning meeting September – Amphibian Conservation Summit call to action designation of Amphibian Specialist Group October – WAZA/CBSG annual meeting November – CBSG hires APO

  5. February 2006 – Panama meeting • April – AZA Training, with sponsorships • May – PAAZAB • May – Mexico Training and Strategy • June – ASA structure meeting • August - WAZA/CBSG annual meetings • September – AZA, EAZA • September – Madagascar • October – Costa Rica • Colombia, Tanzania, …

  6. The Mandates • 2005 IUCN ACAP White Papers: • “Survival assurance colonies are mandatory for amphibian species that will not persist in the wild long enough to recover naturally once environments are restored; these species need to be saved now through ex-situ measures so that more complete restoration of ecosystems is possible in the future” • 2005 IUCN ACAP Declaration: • “The ACAP recommends prioritized ... captive survival assurance programs ... to buy time for species that would otherwise become extinct...” • 2006 IUCN ACAP Report: • “The only hope for populations and species at immediate risk of extinction is immediate rescue for the establishment and management of captive survival-assurance colonies”

  7. Making the Mandate Tangible To save from immediate extinction every species that needs ex situ conservation, ... • … each zoo must commit to secure the future for one amphibian species. • ~500 zoos working individually and together = ~500 species saved

  8. Are zoos and aquariums ready to respond? • Currently very limited capacity to hold and breed amphibians in the world’s zoos (10/60, 10%) • Most collections are cosmopolitan mixes with inadequate attention to hygiene and biosecurity • Limited numbers of staff with amphibian skills

  9. Do we have the resources? • If each visitor contributes just 2 cents for amphibian conservation, then we will have all the funds that we need. • If each zoo would devote to amphibians the resources that are devoted to the care of one high-profile, big mammal species in your collection, then we will have all the resources that we need.

  10. We do have (or can have) the needed financial resources! • Direct allocation from existing conservation or collection budgets • Special fund-raising, individually and collectively

  11. We do have (or can have) the needed financial resources! • Direct allocation from existing conservation or collection budgets • Special fund-raising, individually and collectively But the rest of the task will be challenging!

  12. Challenges: We need more … • Facilities • Expertise • Knowledge • Techniques and standards • Communication and coordination • Partnerships • Public awareness, support, and action

  13. Challenges: We need more … • Facilities • Expertise • Knowledge • Techniques and standards • Communication and coordination • Partnerships • Public awareness, support, and action Help is on the way!

  14. WAZA and CBSG are together taking responsibility for helping to coordinate the global amphibian ex situ conservation response

  15. WAZA and CBSG are together taking responsibility for helping to coordinate the global amphibian ex situ conservation response Working in close partnership with the IUCN Amphibian Specialist Group

  16. WAZA/CBSG Amphibian Ex situ Conservation Workshop • 13-15 February, 2006, El Valle Panama • CBSG facilitated • 50 participants from 14 countries • 4 Working Groups focusing on two of ACAP topics

  17. Working Group Themes • Organization • Best Practices • Species Selection • Rapid Response

  18. But how do we decide how many resources to allocate, which species to save,and what receives priority for immediate action?

  19. IUCN Red List Assessment for all 5,918 Known Amphibian Species 456 1382 769 671 369 2236 plus a handful of biologically or phylogenetically unique taxa

  20. IUCN SSCAmphibian Specialist GroupGlobal Amphibian Assessment • Will identify candidate list of species at high risk of imminent extinction if not provided the short-term protection of ex situ breeding • Will identify species of high ecological, evolutionary, economic, or cultural importance • Will help to monitor coverage and gaps • Will help to identify resources and opportunities

  21. WAZA, Regional Associations, partnerships, and individual institutions • Identify resources (survey and develop) • Identify geographic, taxonomic, or other interests and opportunities • Match resources and interests with candidate list • Assess readiness and likelihood of success • Do it! • Communicate and coordinate globally • Seek, support, develop links to in situ conservation

  22. EW/CR Taxa for AZA

  23. What Can My Zoo Do? • Commit to saving at least one species • build rescue center onsite, in area in need, preferably both • get your staff trained and involved • Support and expand existing efforts • rescue programs, field surveys, regional programs, and local conservation projects • Participate in the global public awareness and capital campaigns

  24. Build expertise • AZA Amphibian Biology & Management - April • 3 years, >60 students • 6 Latin American students (Panama, Colombia, Mexico, Ecuador) • ABM Mexico - May • DWCT Amphibian Biodiversity Conservation - June • 18 students, 15 countries • ABM/ABC Colombia - October • ABM Tanzania - ??

  25. Building (up) facilities at home • Antwerp, Atlantans, Auckland, Bristol, Cologne, Detroit, Houston, London, Melbourne, Omaha, Perth, San Antonio, Toledo • who’s next?

  26. Quarantine Standards • Highest Standards: Animals or progeny out of range country destined for return to the wild (entrance and exit of pathogens) • Intermediate Standards: Animals or progeny in range country destined for return to the wild (entrance of pathogens) • Lowest Standards: Ex-situ or in-situ with no possibility of return to the wild. Animals not required for conservation or release. (exit of pathogens).

  27. Building facilities offsite • Houston Zoo - El Nispero Zoo (Panama) • Zoo Zurich - Cali Zoo (Colombia) • St. Louis Zoo - Catolica University (Ecuador) • Omaha Zoo - Johannesburg Zoo • London/Chester/Jersey Zoos - Dominica • Chester - standardized mobile biosecure facilities • who’s next?

  28. The Perry Center • 100 % construction (~$650K) • 50% operation (~$150k/yr) • ex situ management, training, research • consortium of zoos • 18 institutions pledged • $82/150K for operation

  29. Amphibian Apathy: does anyone like amphibians? • Traveling exhibits • Shedd 1996 • Aquarium of the Americas 2000 • Moody Gardens 2002 • Clyde Peeling’s Reptiland 2003/2005 • booked into 2009/2010

  30. Detroit’s NACC • opening lines regularly exceeded 100 • zoo attendance rose 22% • Moody Gardens • almost identical increase in attendance • Reptiland • at AMNH, tickets sold out most weekends • the most popular exhibit in the museum's history • terrific press in New York Times, The New Yorker, New York Today, CNN, Associated Press, …

  31. What is the Amphibian Ark? • AArk is a joint effort of WAZA, CBSG, and ASG formed to address the ex situ components of the ACAP. • The mission is to ensure long-term survival in nature utilizing short-term ex situ management of amphibian taxa for which adequate protection in the wild is not currently possible. • AArk will coordinate ex situ programs implemented by global partners (i.e., you!). • Members of the AArk will be members of WAZA, regional, or national zoo associations, AArk-approved private partners and AArk-approved museums, universities and wildlife agencies.

  32. Amphibian Ark IUCN SSC WAZA CBSG ASG Conservation Research Assessment In situ Steering Committee Co-chairs: WAZA, CBSG, ASG Advisors: Reintro, Vet, Gene Banking, Legal, Ethical, etc. Other members: Regional Zoo Assocs, Private, Academia, Government Amphibian Program Officer Training Officer Taxon Officer Communications Officer Other Officers: Regional, Institutional Taxon Management Groups Taxon Rescue Plans Regional Zoo & Aquarium Association members private sector partners Other approved ex situ facilities (e.g. universities, wildlife agencies) WAZA members and affiliates

More Related