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female snow leopard killed in GB .search operation underway to recover the two cubs of the dead moth

There are tigers in Pakistan ?

And that picture is sad. The leopard is being strangled by the rope.

Nop,
Leopard of different kinds do exist, Bears, and similar sized carnivores.

Above was a linguistic anomaly, you know in Urdu and I believe in Hindi also everything is "Sher", people are not aware of exact terms, neither am I, in Urdu anyway lol
 
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its 2nd kill in one month last month in tribal district khurrum they killed a tiger and nothing happen despite images on social media

111545798_172556490946789_2560595375498011865_n.jpg
That's because of Naya police nizaam in Naya Khyber Pakhtunkhwa.
 
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pakistan have now 200 farms across country to breed the near extinct animals most of these farms are in middle of national parks under wild life departments . but their efforts will be wasted if people did not stop killing them
 
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I think they are more dangerous than wolves and stray dogs

There was a PDF thread some years back about Pakistani snow leopards. It seems that some farmers who kept sheep near the mountains were angry that the snow leopards carried away the sheep. So the Pakistani wildlife department took some steps to pacify the farmers.

There was a thread some days ago about Karachi municipal authority killing stray dogs because they were attacking humans.

In India there are 35+ million stray dogs according to a count some years ago. They are a serious problem.
 
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I know enough to distinguish between a Tiger and a Leopard and that as per records, Tigers went extinct(local) in Pakistan.
they problem of indians is whenever they see word pakistan their all negativity come out from every cell of their brains .and they start thinking how bollywood show them paksitan in last movie . the problem is not animals but problem is pakistan .

and you guys know pakistan more then Pakistanis themselves . ?

pakistan have purchased all kind of near extinct animals for breeding in early 2000s and wild life department worked very hard to bring them back . in one run pakisitan purchased 89 tigers for breeding in late 90s as i remember . it was neglect of 100 years can not be flourish back in 20 years . but numbers are growing every year as national parks are also increasing . do you know last month pakistan announced new 15 national parks ???????

lahore city have some 100+ tigers alone

now a days every animal's numbers are increasing thousands of deer have been breaded and left in national parks . 8600 was given to balochistan as i remember
thori der ke liye desh bhakti rakh dena acha hota hai .
 
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There was a PDF thread some years back about Pakistani snow leopards. It seems that some farmers who kept sheep near the mountains were angry that the snow leopards carried away the sheep. So the Pakistani wildlife department took some steps to pacify the farmers.

There was a thread some days ago about Karachi municipal authority killing stray dogs because they were attacking humans.

In India there are 35+ million stray dogs according to a count some years ago. They are a serious problem.
yes you are right

In north-west Pakistan, big cats are more feared than global terrorists
Pakistan

‘Man-eating leopards’ have been reported around Abbottabad – Osama bin Laden’s last redoubt – as wildlife officials struggle to reassure public
Haq Nawaz Khan and Tim Craig for the Washington Post

Sat 19 Sep 2015 10.00 BST Last modified on Wed 14 Feb 2018 17.37 GMT

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Over the past decade, dozens of common leopards have been shot or poisoned in what wildlife officials fear is the systematic culling of one of Pakistan’s most endangered species. Photograph: Dinodia Photos/Alamy
Osama bin Laden hid out here for months, if not years. But in the hills surrounding Abbottabad in north-western Pakistan, residents say they face a far scarier menace than terrorists.

With descriptive stories that bring to mind mythological tales of man against beast, Abbottabad residents claim to be locked in a terrifying battle against Pakistan’s endangered population of leopards. The big cats – referred to as common leopards to distinguish them from their smaller cousins, snow leopards – lurk in the Himalayan foothills.

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At dusk, common leopards slink from the mountains into the villages that have been steadily encroaching deeper into Pakistan’s forests. Then, residents say, they pounce – killing at least four people and injuring several others over the past four years.

“The leopard just sucked the blood out of her, and then she was dead,” said Zakir Abbasi, 36, recounting a leopard attack in January that killed his seven-year-old niece, Saba Noor.

Embellished? That’s common in this part of Pakistan, a patchwork of communities on the country’s rugged western frontier. As news spreads from village to village, the line between fact and fable is often blurred. But with stories like these in circulation, villagers here in northern Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province are lashing out at the leopards.

Over the past decade, dozens of leopards have been shot or poisoned in what wildlife officials fear is the systematic culling of one of Pakistan’s most threatened species. Now, officials are rushing to convince Pakistanis from rural villages – where poverty is widespread and educational facilities are scarce – about the need to protect even those animals they consider to be fearsome.

“The entire ecological system is being disturbed,” said Iftikhar-uz-Zaman, district forest officer in Abbottabad. “The growing human population and their intervention in the natural habitats of leopards is causing rising attacks on humans, and people are retaliating and killing the leopards.”

The precise number of common leopards remaining in Pakistan is not known, but wildlife experts suspect it’s no more than a few hundred. What’s clear, however, is that their numbers are shrinking because of Pakistan’s rapid population growth and its abysmal record of protecting forests.

About 180 million people live in Pakistan, and the UN expects that by 2050 that number will top 300 million. According to various studies, Pakistan has retained only 2% to 5% of its original tree cover, and it’s losing about 27,300 hectares of trees annually.

Small and medium-size mammals that once flourished in northern Pakistan, such as the Himalayan musk deer, are threatened. Now, hungry leopards are showing up around Abbottabad, which became famous in 2011 when the US military killed Bin Laden at a compound here.

On the outskirts of town, in the scenic Galiyat valley, villagers say the first sign of a leopard is when stray dogs and cats disappear. Then attacks on livestock begin. Eventually, villagers come face to face with the animals, which are naturally reclusive.





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A memorial to Saba Noor, aged seven, who was killed by a leopard near her village of Badyala in January. Officials say women and children are more vulnerable to such attacks. Photograph: Haq Nawaz/Washington Post
Muhammad Zafran, 45, said his father, Muhammad Jan, 65, was hospitalised for six months and eventually died after a leopard attacked him in January 2014. “It was 7.15pm, in the dark of winter … the leopard hid in the bushes and jumped on him,” Zafran said. “My father’s right hand was bitten and his head skinned, and hair pulled out by the leopard with just one tug.”

But wildlife officials say reports of man-eating leopards are, in most cases, overblown.

Uzma Khan, director of species conservation at the World Wildlife Fund Pakistan, recently completed a doctoral dissertation that examined the circumstances behind the recent attacks. She concluded that the leopard that killed Noor in January did not consume her, suggesting that the animal mistook the child for other prey. In January 2011, a reported attack on a 35-year-old man turned out not to have been an attack at all. Instead, Khan said, the man fell and hit his head on a rock when a leopard leaped from a bush and startled him. Khan has no record of an attack resembling the one described by Zafran, but she said non-fatal attacks were reported here in 2005, 2007, 2008, 2010 and 2013.

But efforts by wildlife officials to dispel rumours of “blood-sucking” leopards are complicated by past attacks in which humans may have been targeted as food. In November 2011, an 11-year-old girl and a seven-year-old boy were killed in separate attacks. In each case, Khan said, the leopard ate part of the corpse.

A series of attacks over 10 days during the summer of 2005 resulted in the deaths of six women near Abbottabad. In two of those cases, Khan said, the leopard ate part of its victim. Overall, however, research suggests that someone is far more likely to be killed by a tiger in India or a lion in Africa than by a leopard in Pakistan, she said.

In Pakistan, retaliation is often swift. Dozens of leopards have been killed over the past decade; three were reported to have been poisoned near Abbottabad in March.

“People are scared,” said Syed Mushtaq, 38, a social worker in Bagh, 25km southeast of Abbottabad. “The people move in groups with sticks and guns … because the leopards don’t attack groups of people.”

To try to protect villagers as well as leopards, officials here are urging residents to remain indoors after sunset and directing schools to dismiss their students by mid-afternoon.

“We are trying to educate people when it’s not safe to enter the forests, and that little children should never go into the forests alone,” Khan said. “So, we are saying, ‘You must let children go home [from school] by 2pm so, if they have to walk an hour, they are home well before sunset.’”

For a big cat to roam, you need a much bigger area

Uzma Khan, World Wildlife Fund Pakistan
Several of the most recent attacks occurred when children were crouched in the woods to relieve themselves. Women are attacked more than men because they spend more time in the forests, Khan said.

“Women here have more responsibility for household chores like wood collection, water collection and collecting fruit,” she said. “They have to make breakfast for their husband or children, before school, so they go into the forests early in the morning … We are saying, ‘Don’t go when it’s dark’.”

Though such messages may help to limit encounters in the short term, Khan said Pakistan’s government also needs to set aside more protected forests. Wildlife officials recently collared a male leopard and determined that it has a range of about 90km. Near Abbottabad, the largest track of protected forest is the 50 sq km Ayubia National Park.

“For a big cat to roam, you need a much bigger area,” Khan said.

Changing the mindset of Pakistan’s government, however, won’t be easy. Earlier this month, Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif proposed a new highway to connect the capital, Islamabad, with Murree, a resort town 65km south-east of Abbottabad. The highway – and the development it would bring – would slice through even more prime leopard habitat, Khan said.

This article appeared in the Guardian Weekly, which incorporates material from the Washington Post

 
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No tigers in Pakistan, bhai.
Tiger count up in Punjab
Breeding farms and zoos report an increase in the number of big cats

Asif Mehmood July 04, 2020





721976-tiger-1402820636.jpg


LAHORE:
The big-cat population in the province appears to be doing well. At different breeding farms and even at the prominent zoos, within the boundaries of Punjab, the tiger population is growing steadily.

According to details gathered by the Express Tribune, the number of tigers has witnessed an increase in zoos. “The Lahore Safari Zoo now has 39 big-cats, and the Lahore Zoo has 35,” said one official from the wildlife department.

Punjab, the officer said, is dotted with breeding farms and facilities that promote the growth of exotic animals, including tigers. “There are more than 200 breeding farms across the province,” said Mudassar Hassan, who serves as the Deputy Director at the Punjab Wildlife and Parks Department. Of these 200 farms, Hassan said, more than 20 specialise in breeding exotic tigers and other big cats. “The breeds include the African lion, common tiger, lions, and a variety of pumas,” claimed Hassan.

Tigers are the most widely recognized animals in the world and also on the verge of extinction. According to the World Wildlife Fund (WWF), a leading organization in wildlife conservation, the population of tigers is shrinking globally. On its website, the Switzerland-based organization shares a grim picture: “Just over a century ago, 100,000 wild tigers roamed across Asia. Today, fewer than 3,900 live.”

Pakistan, according to experts, does not have a significant population of these big cats. Most tigers, lions, and leopards seen at zoos, come from other parts of the world.

Private breeding

Interestingly, while Pakistan is not an exporter, private farms across Punjab seem to have a decent population of tigers. One such private breeder in Lahore wishes to export the animal. “The tiger population is growing. It is getting difficult to pay the daily bills for their diet,” claimed Mian Zia.

Zia has 14 different types of tigers, which include a variety from Africa. “Each day, I spend between Rs. 2,000 - 3,000 to feed the big cats,” said Zia. The strict regulations around exporting, he said, prevent him from selling the tigers outside Pakistan.

Over the past five years, Pakistan has imported more than 85 big cats that include pumas, tigers, lions, and leopards. Out of the total, 15, ended up as trophies for hunters. Wildlife experts blame the hunting for the dwindling numbers of tigers. According to the WWF, much of the decline in the tiger population has occurred in the past decade.

Published in The Express Tribune, July 4th, 2020.
 
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they problem of indians is whenever they see word pakistan their all negativity come out from every cell of their brains .and they start thinking how bollywood show them paksitan in last movie . the problem is not animals but problem is pakistan .

and you guys know pakistan more then Pakistanis themselves . ?

pakistan have purchased all kind of near extinct animals for breeding in early 2000s and wild life department worked very hard to bring them back . in one run pakisitan purchased 89 tigers for breeding in late 90s as i remember . it was neglect of 100 years can not be flourish back in 20 years . but numbers are growing every year as national parks are also increasing . do you know last month pakistan announced new 15 national parks ???????

lahore city have some 200 tigers alone

now a days every animal's numbers are increasing thousands of deer have been breaded and left in national parks . 8600 was given to balochistan as i remember
thori der ke liye desh bhakti rakh dena acha hota hai .

Bhai jan there are animal lovers who are doing the same, as I mentioned in the other thread we have raised ibex, Urial, peacock, raw parrot, wild hen, fowls and few others and you'll be surprised to know that the project in charge is my son who is just young enough to hold his own but he loves animal, we have handed over more than 100 peacocks, wild hen, fowls to wild life next year we will hand over ibex.

I know of at least 8 or 9 families which are doing it, things are changing here, at least we are much better than those sick cow vigilante nations who would kill humans for an animal. Perhaps one needs to look at al jazeera's documentary on the topic i mentioned.
 
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Tiger count up in Punjab
Breeding farms and zoos report an increase in the number of big cats

Asif Mehmood July 04, 2020





721976-tiger-1402820636.jpg


LAHORE:
The big-cat population in the province appears to be doing well. At different breeding farms and even at the prominent zoos, within the boundaries of Punjab, the tiger population is growing steadily.

According to details gathered by the Express Tribune, the number of tigers has witnessed an increase in zoos. “The Lahore Safari Zoo now has 39 big-cats, and the Lahore Zoo has 35,” said one official from the wildlife department.

Punjab, the officer said, is dotted with breeding farms and facilities that promote the growth of exotic animals, including tigers. “There are more than 200 breeding farms across the province,” said Mudassar Hassan, who serves as the Deputy Director at the Punjab Wildlife and Parks Department. Of these 200 farms, Hassan said, more than 20 specialise in breeding exotic tigers and other big cats. “The breeds include the African lion, common tiger, lions, and a variety of pumas,” claimed Hassan.

Tigers are the most widely recognized animals in the world and also on the verge of extinction. According to the World Wildlife Fund (WWF), a leading organization in wildlife conservation, the population of tigers is shrinking globally. On its website, the Switzerland-based organization shares a grim picture: “Just over a century ago, 100,000 wild tigers roamed across Asia. Today, fewer than 3,900 live.”

Pakistan, according to experts, does not have a significant population of these big cats. Most tigers, lions, and leopards seen at zoos, come from other parts of the world.

Private breeding

Interestingly, while Pakistan is not an exporter, private farms across Punjab seem to have a decent population of tigers. One such private breeder in Lahore wishes to export the animal. “The tiger population is growing. It is getting difficult to pay the daily bills for their diet,” claimed Mian Zia.

Zia has 14 different types of tigers, which include a variety from Africa. “Each day, I spend between Rs. 2,000 - 3,000 to feed the big cats,” said Zia. The strict regulations around exporting, he said, prevent him from selling the tigers outside Pakistan.

Over the past five years, Pakistan has imported more than 85 big cats that include pumas, tigers, lions, and leopards. Out of the total, 15, ended up as trophies for hunters. Wildlife experts blame the hunting for the dwindling numbers of tigers. According to the WWF, much of the decline in the tiger population has occurred in the past decade.

Published in The Express Tribune, July 4th, 2020.
Red herring alert, lol.
 
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She concluded that the leopard that killed Noor in January did not consume her, suggesting that the animal mistook the child for other prey. In January 2011, a reported attack on a 35-year-old man turned out not to have been an attack at all. Instead, Khan said, the man fell and hit his head on a rock when a leopard leaped from a bush and startled him. Khan has no record of an attack resembling the one described by Zafran

Hmm.
 
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Is there any ecosystem in Pakistan that can sustain a tiger population?
 
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