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India’s elusive snow leopards snapped in key survey February 1, 2024

  • Writer: Ana Cunha-Busch
    Ana Cunha-Busch
  • Jan 31, 2024
  • 2 min read

Snow leopards have spotted white-greyish fur that keeps them well insulated in cold weather — it can be 5cm long on their back and sides and almost 12cm long on their belly.
Snow leopards have spotted white-greyish fur that keeps them well insulated in cold weather — it can be 5cm long on their back and sides and almost 12cm long on their belly. Image Credit: Courtesy: WWF

By AFP - Agence France Presse


The mammoth 5-year survey is the first nationwide review of ‘ghosts of the mountains’


India-wildlife-conservation


New Delhi, Jan 31, 2024 (AFP) - Snow leopards have been dubbed the "ghosts of the mountains" for their elusive behavior, but Indian researchers have successfully photographed more than 200 in a landmark study estimating at least 718 across the country.

The mammoth five-year survey, the first nationwide review of snow leopards in India, monitored 120,000 square kilometers (46,000 square miles) of their remote mountain habitat, according to the environment ministry.

It involved setting out camera traps in nearly 2,000 locations recording

more than 180,000 nights -- the equivalent of nearly 500 years -- to record

241 individual leopards on camera.

The leopards -- with thick grey fur dotted with dark spots, and large paws

that act as natural snow shoes -- are "masters of stealth and camouflage",

according to the World Wide Fund For Nature (WWF) India, who assisted the assessment.

The environment ministry said the survey has "significantly increased

understanding" of the rare creatures, Indian media reported Wednesday.

Snow leopards, scientific name Panthera uncia, are listed as "vulnerable"

species by the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN).

Before the survey, the WWF had suggested that there were between 400-700 snow leopards in India. The report now puts the total number in the upper range of earlier estimates.

Two-thirds of the cats are found in India's far northern Ladakh, with the

rest in Himalayan states including Uttarakhand and Himachal Pradesh, the

survey found.

"Consistent monitoring is essential to ensuring snow leopards' long-term

survival," the environment ministry added.

The Snow Leopard Trust, a US-based conservation group, says the exact total number is not known but that "there may be as few as 3,920 and probably no more than 6,390" across 12 countries in Asia.

The IUCN has dubbed the solitary cat the "ghost of the mountains" for its

ability to hide, noting numbers are "decreasing mostly due to habitat loss,

poaching, and the impacts of climate change".


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