Archive for the ‘Elephant’ Category

Gorilla Country

Posted by Peter in Africa,Animal Origins & Fun Facts,Elephant,Endangered Species,Field Research,Gorilla,community-based conservation

In the Republic of Congo, the Houston Zoo is partnering with the Mbeli Bai Gorilla Program in the Nouabalé-Ndoki National Park. Mbeli Bai is the only long-term demographic study on western gorillas which uses direct observations to provide important baseline information on the social organization, demography and behavior of an intact population of gorillas. Detailed studies are also undertaken on the activity of other large mammal species using the bai, such as forest elephants, sitatungas, forest buffaloes as well as otters and many other species. 

Why should we care to protect wildlife in places so far away? Watch the video of wildlife living in and around Mbeli Bai in the Republic of Congo.

Did you watch the video? All 5 minutes? We would like to hear your thoughts on this 5 minute glimpse into a very special place.

If you would like to help support the Mbeli Bai Gorilla Program and the Houston Zoo’s efforts to save threatened wildlife in Africa, please click on the button below.

Baby Elephant Rescue in Hwange National Park

Posted by Renee in Africa,Elephant,community-based conservation

Here is a different type of baby elephant video.  My friends at Painted Dog Conservation in Zimbabwe spend a lot of their time following packs of African Wild Dogs through Hwange nation park .  Occasionally, they find  injured animals needing their assistance along the way.  They often help animals with snare (wire trap) wounds that need to be treated.   One afternoon Jealous (this is actually his name, native Zimbabwean parents name children after English words they have heard or seen, but don’t understand what they mean.  His name does not describe his nature.), PDC’s head tracker, found a baby elephant trapped upside down in a water trough and called Peter Blinston, PDC’s project manager, to assist in a rescue.  Watch the heroic rescue below.

Saving Bornean Elephants

Posted by Renee in Borneo,Elephant,Endangered Species,Featured,Field Research

We are excited to announce that a wild  female Bornean elephant was fitted with a satellite collar on May 26, 2010 within the Kinabatangan Wildlife Sanctuary as part of a collaborative project between the Sabah Wildlife Department, the NGO HUTAN and the Danau Girang Field Center.

The Houston Zoo funded this effort  along with several other wildlife organizations including the Columbus Zoo, Mohamed bin Zayed Conservation Fund, Elephant Family and USFWS Asian Elephant Fund. The aim of this project is to collect crucial information on the movement of the elephants to contribute to the long-term conservation management of the species in Borneo.

The 35 year old matriach was named Sunda and the satellite data from the collared individuals will provide important information on the available suitable habitat in the Lower Kinabatangan Wildlife Sanctuary

This elephant below was collared previously during the initiation of the program in 2008-2009.

Artwork Auction to Benefit Haiti Recovery

Posted by Peter in Elephant,What You Can Do,orangutan

Nebula by By Houston Zoo Elephants: Thai, Methai, Shanti, Tess and Tucker

Nebula by By Houston Zoo Elephants: Thai, Methai, Shanti, Tess and Tucker

Our orangs and elephants have created 2 unique, beautiful paintings which we are auctioning off on eBay. All proceeds from this painting will go to the Clinton Bush Haiti Fund. 

Previous zoo art sales have raised money for victims of the 2004 Indian Ocean tsunami, in which more than 200,000 people died, and for wildlife conservation.

To bid on these items, go to:

http://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewItem&item=260561583318

or

http://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewItem&item=260561586452

Check out the Houston Chronicle March 10th article by Allan Turner at http://www.chron.com/disp/story.mpl/metropolitan/6907358.html

Life Aquatic: Borneo in the rainy season

Posted by Peter in Elephant,Featured,Field Research,orangutan

logodanauTypically when you work in a seasonal floodplain, you expect nothing less than seasonal flooding. But sometimes, the river overflows its banks and intrudes like rarely seen before.

Our partners in Elephant Conservation work out of the Danau Girang Field Centre in the Malaysian State of Sabah on the island of Borneo. Geography Assigment – google a map on find Sabah on the island. The Centre sits on the banks of the Kinabatangan River, a 560km river which runs from the mountains of SW Sabah down to the Sulu Sea. Find this on the map as well, I will wait…

Danau Girang underwater...

Danau Girang underwater...

When I visited last October, the giant meandering river was easily 10feet below the bank. The field house photo below is then another 100-150 yards into the forest. All travel in the area is thankfully by boat but you can imagine how difficult it must be to track elephants, orangutans, and other animals in this environment. Not to mention issues with clean drinking water, flooding generators and whether your clothesline will float away in the night.

I of course cannot forget to mention how much closer this flooding will be bring crocodiles, who normally stay on the riverbanks, to your door now that they think your door is the riverbank.

“Good morning dear, there is a 15 foot crocodile on our front porch”.

“Oh, lovely, invite him in for tea…”

Last Call for Borneo!

Posted by Peter in Elephant,Endangered Species,Travel,What You Can Do

DSC_0407Reservation for our Borneo’s Elephants and Orangutans Tour will be closing soon with limited spaces available. The Houston Zoo is offering a one-of-a-kind experience on the island of Borneo. An encounter with  elephants and orangutans in the wild along the Kinabatangan River May 13-24, 2010.

The Kinabatangan River is 560km long and the Lower Kinabatangan region is estimated to have the largest concentration of wildlife in all of Malaysia. The area is renowned for its tropical birds including all 8 species of Hornbill found in Borneo. Crocodiles, monitor lizards, wild pigs, otters, civets, 10 species of primates including the island’s own proboscis monkey and Bornean Orang-utan , and of course, Borneo’s  elephants.
Contact conservation@houstonzoo.org for more information or go to our travel webpage

Art for Orangutans by Orangutans?

Posted by Peter in Elephant,orangutan

2008 Event Painting "I-Ching"

2008 Event Painting "I-Ching"

The Houston Zoo’s 4th Pongos Helping Pongos Art Event will be held at the G Gallery beginning at 6:00 p.m. on March 27th. This very special evening will feature over 40 individual paintings done by our orangutans, elephants, siamangs babirusa and clouded leopards. Each painting will be professionally framed thanks to our partners YolArt Framing and accompanied by conservation information, an animal artist biography and photograph. The paintings will be displayed at G Gallery in the Heights for a single night in a fine arts setting, including refreshments and stunning photographic portraits of the featured artists. This special event concludes at 8:00 p.m.

All the paintings, portraits  and photography will be sold by silent auction with all the proceeds donated to the preservation of orangutans and other animals in their natural habitat on the island of Borneo.

The benefits of this program are many. It provides Zoo animals an outlet to express their intelligence, personalities, and creative abilities. It allows them to fulfill their mission as ambassadors for their species by generating precious funds that support conservation actions on the ground and behavioral enrichment initiatives at the Zoo. At the same time, this program engages the local community, creating a deeper appreciation for the lives of all animals and inspiring a greater concern for their well-being. And all of this is achieved through the exhibition and sale of the animals’ own art work through the annual event that we call Pongos Helping Pongos. (Pongo pygmaeus is the scientific name for orangutans, so this translates to Orangutans Helping Orangutans.) 

Since 2004, Pongos Helping Pongos has raised over $100,000 for the Kinabatangan Orangutan Conservation Project and Elephant Conservation Program in Sukau, Sabah, Malaysia and almost $20,000 in support of field conservation efforts at Indonesia’s Gunung Palung National Park. Both projects are located on the island of Borneo and represent some of the last remaining habitats for wild orangutans. In addition, a portion of the the funds are applied toward continuing orangutan behavioral enrichment projects at the Houston Zoo. We are very proud to be a partner of the Kinabatangan Orangutan Conservation Program, supporting critical research, education, and awareness programs for orangutans, elephants, and habitat protection in the region.

We look forward to hosting the best Pongos Helping Pongos event we have ever held, so call your friends and save the date on your calendar for a truly memorable evening. Come and enjoy the wine and, appetizers and join us for this unique event that supports our artistic animals and the field conservation efforts focused on their wild counterparts.

For more information or to help support this event please contact conservation@houstonzoo.org

Bornean Orangutan, Sabah, Malaysia. Photo courtesy Paul Swen. Available at 2010 event.

Bornean Orangutan, Sabah, Malaysia. Photo courtesy Paul Swen. Available at 2010 event.

Year of the Gorilla Part 8: The Bushmeat Trade

Posted by Peter in Africa,Elephant,Endangered Species,Gorilla

No pictures today as we will touch briefly on the issue of illegal bushmeat and gather much of the information from the Bushmeat Crisis Task Force (BCTF). This will be just an introduction and then we can steer you to more detailed websites for information.

Bushmeat is simply defined as meat that comes from the “bush” and in Africa this means the forests. For generations, local communities carried out subsistence hunting, gathering animals as needed as a vital protein source. But at some point the hunting of bushmeat went from sustainable to the “Bushmeat Crisis”. It is defined on the BCTF website as “Commercial, illegal and unsustainable hunting for the meat of wild animals is causing widespread local extinctions in Asia and West Africa. It is a crisis because of rapid expansion to countries and species which were previously not at risk, largely due to an increase in commercial logging, with an infrastructure of roads and trucks that links forests and hunters to cities and consumers.”

Gorillas, chimpanzees, elephants, forest antelope, crocodiles, monkeys, birds, buffalo, hippo’s…are all taken as part of the trade, endangered species – protected or not. Again directly from the BCTF website: Though habitat loss is often cited as the primary threat to wildlife, commercial hunting for the meat of wild animals has become the most significant immediate threat to the future of wildlife in Africa and around the world; it has already resulted in widespread local extinctions in Asia and West Africa. This threat to wildlife is a crisis because it is rapidly expanding to countries and species which were previously not at risk, largely due to an increase in commercial logging, with an infrastructure of roads and trucks that links forests and hunters to cities and consumers. The bushmeat crisis is a human tragedy as well: the loss of wildlife threatens the livelihoods and food security of indigenous and rural populations most depend on wildlife as a staple or supplement to their diet, and bushmeat consumption is increasingly linked to deadly diseases like HIV/AIDS, Ebola, and Foot and Mouth disease.

Simply stated – if one village or community hunts wildlife as a sustainable resource, there are opportunities to protect endangered species and protect habitats. When wildlife is taken illegally, in mass quantity not for personal use but to sell for profit, and shipped across country borders, it is no longer sustainable.

Take a few minutes to learn about the issues facing wildlife not in only in Africa, but Asia and other developing nations at the Bushmeat Crisis Task Force website http://www.bushmeat.org

I will just add here that last year, nearly 300,000 pounds of Bushmeat was confiscated being flown into the US illegally. The problem is not simply related to only developing nations.

Tomorrow’s Gorilla Blog : A War for Wildlife

*This is part 8/10 in our Membership Giveaway. Post a comment here and on at least 2 other mt gorilla blogs to enter to win a free Zoo membership.

Orangutans face habitat loss

Posted by Peter in Elephant,Endangered Species,orangutan

There is a nice article in the July 22nd issue of New Scientist which can be seen online at: http://www.newscientist.com/article/mg20327183.700-controversial-palmoil-plan-may-save-the-orangutan.html?full=true&print=true

There are many issues facing the survival of this species both on Borneo and Sumatra, the only two places in the world wild orangutans exist. Habitat loss and severly fragmented habitat from logging and palm oil plantations have taken a heavy toll on the islands populations. Many young animals in both Indonesia and Malaysia end up in rescue centers. These animals are difficult to rehabilitate for release and there are very few places left for them to be released to.

The Houston Zoo actively supports both the Kinabatangan Orangutan Conservation Program and elephant studies based out of the Danau Girang Field Centre. For more on these programs, go to: http://www.houstonzoo.org/bornean-orangutan-conservation/ and http://www.houstonzoo.org/borneo-elephant-conservation/

Map from New Scientist Article, Sabah, Borneo (Malaysia) http://www.newscientist.com/data/images/archive/2718/27183701.jpg

Map from New Scientist Article, Sabah, Borneo (Malaysia) http://www.newscientist.com/data/images/archive/2718/27183701.jpg