Latest from the Indian Ocean ... Refugees of the Lost Rainforest P14 Autumn / Winter 2013
Transcription
Latest from the Indian Ocean ... Refugees of the Lost Rainforest P14 Autumn / Winter 2013
Latest from the Indian Ocean P16 Refugees of the Lost Rainforest P14 Autumn / Winter 2013 2 help protect our forests Dear Members, Our founder, Gerald Durrell, would always refer to membership as “the backbone of the Trust”, and never forgot how his life’s work was made possible by the kindness of those who shared his love of animals, concern for the future and believed in his vision. Here at Durrell, we’ve not forgotten that you, the Members, allow us to carry this work and Gerald’s legacy into the future. As ‘On The Edge’ is a ‘benefit’ of membership, we truly hope that you enjoy this magazine, and find that it’s an informative snapshot of the work that your kind provision allows us to carry out, both home and away. As such, we’d like to ask if you’d like to continue to receive ‘On The Edge’ on paper, or whether you’d prefer it online, to save paper, and thus cut down the environmental impact. Of course ‘On The Edge’ is your publication, and we’ll send it to you in whichever format you choose, we’d just ask that you please let us know via email: or by writing to: 3 4 A word from the CEO 5 Durrell Times 6 In Brief 8 Farewell Wolfgang and Barbara 10 Animal training 14 Refugees of the Lost Rainforest 16 From the Front Line 18 Rebuilding habitats 20 Skink appeal update 21 Indian Ocean campus 22 Investing in our people 24 Introducing Jeff Dawson 26 The Lonely Dodo 28 Career start for threatened animals 29 I’m a Conservationist 30 Noticeboard Photo and drawing credits Estate of Gerald Durrell, Aardman Animations, Paul Lewis, Gregory Guida, Phillip Coffey, Nik Cole, Rouben Mootoocurpen, Dan Lay, Rick Jones, James Underwood, Colm Farrington, Gordon Hunt, Chris Clark, Colin Stevenson, Fi Marchant and Linda Scott. 4 I was lucky enough to join Durrell in June this year and after a few of months am beginning to understand the Trust, its people, activities and challenges. It’s a terrific organisation, doing important work to recover wildlife from the very brink of extinction, and with a unique combination of skills. Our husbandry and breeding knowledge in the Park helps us in our overseas programmes when we rescue and restore animals and both the Field and Park hands-on experience allows us to teach with real creditability. The lessons we have learnt are multiplied when these students and practitioners go out to put to work what we have taught. We are dependent on the generosity of donors for this, and I would like to thank you for your support. Our work would not be possible without you. I have a commercial background and so do tend to think about things in a business like way! Until recently I was Chief Executive at the Wine Society, a not-for-profit wine retailer with about 200 staff, and a nonexecutive for a number of organisations (the NHS, an insurance company, a Sport England offshoot, a University….) Previously I worked in companies who were very much for profit – Denby, Mercedes- Benz, Volvo, BAT – which included living abroad and travelling quite widely. I was a director of the National Forest Company, which is re-foresting 200 square miles of central England, and have an abiding interest in trees, as well as the wildlife they support. Back in the mists of time, I studied Economics at Cambridge, and was even lectured by Mervyn King, but am completely innocent of recent events. You can be sure I will be doing my upmost to make the most of your support and Gerald’s legacy. Oliver Johnson DURRELL TIMES Autumn / Winter 2013 Durrell’s meerkats’ cameo appearance If you’ve been watching ITV show ‘The Zoo’ throughout this summer season, you may have noticed that whilst the announcer introduces the show, there are some rather cheeky meerkats on the accompanying video clip. The audacious animals surrounding the observation bubble are none other than our resident ‘Discovery Desert’ dwellers, getting their five seconds of fame, thanks to an ITV camera crew that visited us at the beginning of the year. Cans for Corridors champions The annual Insurance Corporation Conservation Awards came to Jersey in July, and this year were held right at Durrell Wildlife Park. Head of Mammals Dominic Wormell and Education Officer Sarah Nugent were presented with the Global Inspiration Award for their work alongside Jersey’s schoolchildren promoting the ‘Cans for Corridors’ scheme. By helping them to recycle aluminum cans, the children fund planting of tree corridors in Brazil’s Atlantic Rainforest, in the region where Durrell’s black lion tamarins have been returned to the wild. See overleaf for more on recent can collecting adventures. 6 Durrell’s maverick professor nominated for top award biggest accolade in The Indianapolis Prize is perhaps the ers include worldwinn ous Previ . the conservation world ife and nature such wildl of urs savio changing, game-changing Dr. Iain Douglasand rup Amst n as polar bear expert Steve ants. eleph of Hamilton, lifelong champion Prof. Carl Jones For the second time running, Durrell’s own his letter of nees, nomi of list s igiou MBE has made the prest atologist prim than other none by recommendation written mantra and ing think box’ the de Jane Goodall. Carl’s ‘outsi seen has – ” ration resto at habit s – “species recovery drive each s idual indiv 10 r unde from es him return five bird speci of his 60 years on to viable populations. For more than half itian islands, Maur tated devas ring earth, he’s been resto up. literally from the ground throughout Join us in wishing Carl the very best of luck ves this deser he agree l the process, we’re sure you’l incredible affirmation. Cans for Corridors and team of staff Sarah and a ed nd te at ve ha ell Durr volunteers from , 07 20 ic festival since ‘Jersey Live’ mus d ad to ns rs’ empty ca collecting revelle azil’s s planted in Br ee tr l to the tota per m bu a s wa 13 est. 20 Atlantic rainfor 0 50 3, ction, with the year for can colle w ne 0 27 ed funding empties collect soil as will restore the ich saplings wh ents gm fra t es for g ectin they grow, conn e! lif nfine local wild that currently co Tree corridor Ca rl Jon es with radiated I n dia n a polis L tortoise ily Meda l e 7 skies The ‘sea crow’ graces Jersey again, 100 years later! According to Gree k mythology, the re d-billed chough wa on Calypso’s ‘blesse s sacred, as it dwelt d island’. In 2013, aft er over a century delighted to say th of absence, we are at the skies of ‘ou r’ Island of Jersey the wheeling flight ar e blessed again by and raucous calls of the ‘sea crow’. The Birds on the Ed ge programme, in collaboration with for Jersey, The St The National Trus ates of Jersey Depa t rtm ent of Environme Park, Cornwall, foc nt and Paradise uses on coastal resto ration in the Islan as the flagship spec d, with the chough ies. After tireless, pa instaking work by Dr. H. Glyn Young Durrell biologist and Senior Bird Ke eper Liz Corry, th captive-bred chou e first releases of ghs finally occurred at the end of Augu st. Although there is much work still to be done, the initia resisted attack by l free-flying pair a persistent pere grine falcon, and purposes acted lik to all intents and e ‘wild’ choughs. Wa tch this space for up dates. Durrell needs you - to ‘Ride London’. cyclists Cycling in Britain’s capital city can often make commuter busy with s, selve them es speci d feel like endangere er of obstacles. traffic and delivery vehicles and all mann Red-billed chou gh inaugural event took place This is why ‘Ride London’ was created. The was the first ever largeon the 3rd and 4th of August this year, and capital. The streets and scale non-sporting cycle festival held in the trians were safely routed roads were closed to motor traffic, and pedes er, safer city for those who out of the cycle paths, allowing for a quiet like self-powered transport. on through Surrey, and A highlight was the 100-mile race from Lond supporters to help us out. this is where we need two fit, keen Durrell s for the aforementioned For the 2014 event, we have reserved 2 space much needed funds for supporters to race on our behalf, and raise our mission. Surrey with hundreds of If you think speeding through London and rity sounds like a great like-minded cyclists and perhaps the odd celeb -Marie on way to help our cause, then please call Anne [email protected] ie.Ne -Mar Anne l emai or 93, +44 (0)1534 8600 8 Suzanne Fox Really sad, we will miss her but she has seemed so lonely without Wolfie. h sford O Bee Bas will miss , how sad h so t o b m the much x es ne Jon Christsiad news, Such Babs you RIP such a were y bear.x lovel Cathie An ders It iS the end if an era! So but at le sad as are togeth t they peaceful. er and Rebecca My thou Hamilton g with th hts are e staff who had to m immen ake this se but ultimly difficult ately caring d and to ecision, a loved h ll who er. our Kate Seym ara, rb a B r o o P ely bear v lo a such ith w Reunited he ..s ... g n a g Wolf issed m e must hav u m ch! him sooo Andean Be ar Foundatio n RIP, Babs. Bear hu all the team gs from Ecuador to here in all the team at Du rr have made ell who a brave, kind decis ion which must have be difficult. xo en very xo m 9 Inevitably, when working with animals, there are highs and lows. Whilst 2013 was ushered in by news of pregnancies and births amongst our iconic primates, in the case of another pair of much loved Durrell icons, it was to be the end of an era. With a heavy heart, we bid a fond farewell to our big male Andean bear, Wolfgang, on the morning of March 7th. ‘Wolfie’, as he was known to many staff, volunteers and visitors, had reached the impressive age of twenty-eight years, and had spent over twenty-five of those here at Durrell with his partner Barbara, having both arrived in 1987. Andean bears. ‘Babs‘ was lighter than Wolfgang, and her movement seemed easier to manage, but within a few months the medication she was receiving began to have less effect. By June an assessment of Bab’s health and quality of life brought a gloomy outlook. She was suffering, and as with her partner, every available technique had ceased to afford her any comfort. Vet and keeper staff had been keeping a close eye on Wolfgang’s age-related arthritis, and were medically managing what was obviously becoming an increasingly debilitating condition. For staff, many of whom had cared for the bears as long as they’d been at Durrell themselves, seeing him in obvious discomfort was very difficult, and on the final morning, a sad realisation came that his knee joints were making normal movement for Wolfie impossible. In a heartbreaking decision, borne of kindness, our big bear was peacefully put to sleep. On the morning of June 6th, Babs too was put to sleep with many emotional staff visibly feeling the loss. The pair bore seven precious cubs during their time at Durrell, an impressive contribution to the captive population of their threatened species. More than this, the effect they had on many visitors cemented a life-long fascination and fondness for their kind. They truly touched many hearts, some local children having ‘grown up with them’. On Facebook and in person, along with touching tributes to his memory, many visitors began to ask how Barbara was faring without her life-long mate. She too had been coping with arthritis and hair loss, the latter common in captive female New beginnings Mark Brayshaw, now Head of Animal Collection and formerly a bear keeper of 20 years here at Durrell, told us: They were both incredibly gentle and tender individuals and, for myself and all their other keepers over the years, it was a privilege to have worked with them. On August 13th, after months of hard work re-perching and landscaping Barbara and Wolfgang’s former home, we delightedly welcomed ‘Bahia’, a two year-old Andean bear from Tierpark Berlin. As we speak, she is settling in to her new environment, and we hope to update you on Bahia and Quechua who will join her from Emmen Zoo, in the next issue. 10 By Andrew Routh Training animals – no sooner do I see the words on the page than I know there will be concerned readers wondering how this affects the animals held at the Wildlife Park. What are we up to? Well – firstly, we are not training our animals to perform tricks for our visitors. But then, whether we like it or not, almost all our animals are, by design or accident, “trained”. I remember a few years ago working at a zoo in the UK where, late one day, a senior keeper told me he would not have his zebra trained as it “wasn’t natural”. So I took the feed bucket, rattled my keys against it and called the zebra into the night accommodation, where they tucked into their evening meal – the same as every evening. I was told that was cheating because they knew that was the signal for them to come in for the night. No – they are trained zebra. My suggestion of going to the Serengeti to see what happened if we rattled keys in a bucket near wild zebra to see what happened wasn’t taken in the spirit I had hoped. That’s training – for us, modifying the animal’s behaviour using positive reinforcement. They do something we want and get rewarded with something they want. There is no coercion involved. What are the benefits? Well, as with the zebra example, it can make things run smoothly for everyone, almost without any parties realising training has taken 11 place. For example, our free-ranging tamarins have the benefit of a large area of woodland, with us knowing we can get them back as and when we need. Perhaps the next step up is having an animal that will station itself in one spot, especially convenient if that spot happens to be on top of a set of scales. Knowing an animal’s weight can be invaluable, with reference to both its diet and its health. Obtaining that weight, on a routine basis and with a very willing subject, takes our husbandry several degrees higher. And if this is what we are doing, then how are we doing it? Let’s start by reassuring everybody. Firstly, as mentioned, only positive reinforcement is used. The animals are all voluntary participants and a staged process is used. Each increment on a preplanned pathway to a desired behaviour is rewarded, often by a small and desirable piece of food. (Not surprisingly many of our animals are very keen to join in the training for a tasty morsel). Only the desired behaviour is rewarded and other behaviour is ignored. The training sessions are short and build on previous sessions, planning for each session to always finish on a high note. As a behaviour becomes established the pathway there becomes shorter and quicker, with the reward being given only when that final behaviour is completed. By then it is often embedded into the daily management routine. continued overleaf Komodo dragon 12 The next step is to develop specific training programmes to facilitate, in particular, veterinary procedures. At the Wildlife Park we have a team of keen trainers, led by Veterinary Nurse Mel, who assess requirement and plan accordingly. (This follows on from an inspirational workshop earlier this year facilitated by a colleague from Frankfurt Zoo). Why should we want to do this? Let me give you a couple of examples. We recently have had a pair of orangutan births, the latter one being very high profile. In order to monitor the pregnancies keepers and veterinary staff trained the mums-to-be to be ultrasound scanned. With, initially, a lot of patience and a few grapes both would press their stomachs to a small hole in the mesh, allowing us to scan them and visualise their babies. “Dana” was the one who worried us the most, having had problems in her previous pregnancy leading to a still-birth and a life-threatening episode for her. With some persuasion, (she hated the contact gel), we were able to work with our medical colleagues to scan and measure the baby in order to determine both a projected birth date and the orientation of the baby. And, as they say, the rest is history and we have all seen the remarkable, unique video footage of the birth. Induction of general anaesthesia is always a challenge. It is never without risk and is always stressful, for all parties, even when we use our top-notch dart gun. An alternative is to train the animal to accept being injected by hand. This is something we are working on with several of our primates. One of our priorities is our gorilla “Bahasha” who, sadly, had a premature baby several months ago. In order to plan for her future breeding we will be working, after the summer, again with our medical colleagues to carry out a full reproductive assessment of her. 13 g Lola the red river ho To the future. Blood samples may be essential to check the health of an animal but there is always the worry that a general anaesthetic will not only affect the values but also place the individual animal at risk. Obtaining samples under trained behaviour eliminates all these concerns and, in the past, I have been part of teams collecting blood from tigers, Komodo dragons and giant pandas – all using trained behaviours. And does training have a role to play in our in-country programmes? The answer is yes. We know that we must have our animals fit for the wild, not only physically but behaviourally. There may be concerns that captive-bred individuals may not, at release, have the full repertoire of behaviours to enable them to survive that initial, challenging, period in the wild. One option is to provide a back-up food supply by way of support. And they can be trained to come for additional supplies without compromising their other behaviours. We have done it before, such as with the echo parakeets in Mauritius, and are working on the choughs that are soon to be released at Sorel in Jersey. Training, if used correctly, is an invaluable tool in the care of our animals. It needs just a bit of equipment and a bit more time and patience. The animals are all voluntary participants and a staged process is used. 14 JERSEY The start of 2013 in Jersey was heralded by a bleak, cold winter with unprecedented snowfall, which saw many of the animals at Durrell Wildlife Park huddled in the warmth of their heated enclosures – not least our family of Sumatran orangutans. With two mums-to-be in the group, extra care was being taken, especially as one – 25-yearold Dana – had a remarkable story that was beginning to grow, alongside the infant she was carrying. Across the world in Sumatra, Indonesia, former Durrell Ape Keeper Dr. Ian Singleton, his Sumatran Orangutan Conservation Programme (SOCP) and the orangutans in his care faced much warmer weather, but an altogether bleaker outlook. His rescue centre in Jantho, in Aceh, was full of orphaned young apes, as the forest continued to disappear around them, converted to single rows of palm oil plants to satisfy global demand for the ingredient. One morning whilst the snow melted on the roof of Les Augrès Manor, Sarah Scriven, a Senior News Editor for the local BBC station, called Durrell’s Press Office, to see if we had ‘any news’. The conversation that followed was to set in motion a project that would unite the leton Director of L to R. I an Si ng Deputy head of m Gordon Hunt, ou r stories of Dana and Ian’s orangutans, take Deputy Head of Mammals Gordon Hunt to Sumatra and culminate with groundbreaking footage of a ‘miracle baby’ being born. Dana had joined Durrell in 2009 from Hannover. Within months of her arrival, she had become pregnant by dominant male Dagu. This was great news, as Dana is a genetically important female for the captive population of Sumatran orangutans. Joy, however, would prove short-lived, and almost rendered Dana the same. A full term delivery of a still-born female infant left Dana fighting for her life - losing masses of blood and resulting in blocked fallopian tubes that led experts to declare that she had been left infertile by the tragedy. 15 Gordon Hunt led a reporter from the BBC through Sumatran jungle and rows of rescued ape cages SOCP mam mals This year, to Dana and our other expectant mum Anette had undergone training (see page 12), to facilitate regular ultrasound scanning, allowing Jersey General Hospital Consultant Obstetrician Neil McLaughlin to monitor both babies’ development throughout the pregnancies. Neil had a vested interest in Dana’s baby, having ‘cleared’ Dana’s fallopian tubes – a world first – to allow her to conceive against the odds. During Dana’s pregnancy, Deputy Head of mammals Gordon Hunt led a reporter from the BBC through Sumatran jungle and past rows of rescued ape cages, as the events on both sides of the world were carefully captured on BBC and Durrell cameras. Then, late on Sunday 9th of June, Dana smoothly delivered her baby girl as a newly returned Gordon with Head Vet Andrew Routh and a small team of Durrell staff monitored and filmed the whole process. The footage made it into the incredible film ‘The Refugees of the Lost Rainforest’, which aired on Sunday 14th of July to great acclaim and national media inclusion. We hope to be able to share the full film with you soon, so please do watch this space. Watch the birth: durrell.org/miracle 16 RS GUNNEIN QUOITIUS 17 MAUR There isn’t such a thing as a typical day in the field. Nik Cole Nik Cole 18 For the last 11 years, Durrell’s Dr. Nik Cole has spent much of his time marooned on desert islands in the Indian Ocean. Whilst Robinson Crusoe or Bear Grylls may have placed their own survival first and foremost however, Nik’s mission is the survival of the many unique reptiles native to the Mascarene Islands. It all started over thirty years ago with the removal of other ‘castaways’ that threaten the whole habitat. Nik describes Mauritius and its surrounding islands as a ‘reptile hotspot’. Prior to human settlement, the only mammals found in the area were bats, save for maybe some now absent dugongs or passing dolphins and whales. This meant the land belonged to lizards and snakes, who not only filled the niches within the ecosystems, but shaped them to become the beautiful palm covered islands of mariners’ tales. Said mariners, however, brought some unwelcome guests in the form of rats, goats, cats and other ‘alien’ mammals, all of whom found Mascarene reptiles poor competition, or rather easy prey. A deadly combination of overgrazing and loss of seed dispersing reptiles meant that in the 1970s, Gerald Durrell found barren, denuded wastelands with the remaining reptiles facing certain extinction. At that time, the entirely unique Round Island boa, once the apex predator of these Islands, was deemed too vulnerable and was brought into a captive breeding programme here in Jersey. The charismatic Telfair’s skink, a favoured prey item of the boa was also brought to Jersey, having been completely extirpated on all but the uninhabited Round Island itself. By 1995, on the nearby Island of Gunner’s Quoin, Nik’s predecessors had removed the rats, rabbits and hares, but at this point all of the larger native reptiles had already become extinct. Populations of the smaller lizards, such as Durrell's night gecko (Nactus durrelli), had begun to bounce back, especially impressive as Nactus were thought to have become extinct around 1995. 19 Te lfa ir’s s kin k Geckos and the smaller Bojer’s skink are prey items for the larger Telfair’s skink, and with these smaller lizard populations now at or approaching carrying capacity, Nik and his team from the Mauritian Wildlife Foundation and National Parks and Conservation Service prepared to restore Telfair’s skink populations on the island. Importantly, the Telfair’s skink is also a key seed disperser, crucial to many of the much depleted plant species that are found nowhere else in the world. In 2007, 250 captive-bred skinks were released onto Gunner’s Quoin, radio tagged and subsequently monitored. The skinks performed their role admirably, and one critically endangered species of aloe plant enjoyed a 20% regeneration with now approximately 20,000 plants! Current estimations of Telfair’s skink numbers on Gunner’s Quoin sit around 5,000 individuals, and this could potentially impact another, smaller yet equally crucial relative, the ‘orange-tailed skink’, as well as make existence tough for the Telfair’s themselves, as they begin to compete for resources. With this in mind, and importantly, with plenty of newly grown thick vegetation in place, it was time to put the next predator in place - the long absent Round Island Boa. By October 2012, Nik and the team, assisted by the Forestry Service, began their careful release. Flying in by helicopter with 60 radio tagged boas, they released them into suitable habitat, and monitored closely to assess their health and their effect on the population of their prey. The movement of boas from Round Island was only made possible because of the removal of introduced goats and rabbits in the 1970s and ‘80s. Without these damaging herbivores, Round Island’s habitat started to recover allowing the smaller reptiles and the Telfair’s skink population to increase, subsequently leading to a larger number of snakes than were there when Gerald Durrell first visited. Thanks to the efforts on Gunner’s Quoin, the island could also now support boas that it lost in the mid-1800s. The rest isn’t history... it’s a future, and in a region that became famous for extinctions, it’s a triumphant one so far. Gerald Durrell with Telfair’s sk ink YOU 20 HELP US CAN From Nik Cole, Ile aux Aigrettes The collapse of the Telfair’s skink’s hatchery roof in August 2012 was proving to be a major set-back for the conservation of this threatened lizard on Ile aux Aigrettes. The timing could not have been worse, as the roof’s failure coincided with the onset of the skink’s breeding season. Fortunately, your donation has made a substantial difference, allowing us not only to rebuild a new secure roof, but also to add doors and windows to what was once a shell of a building in the centre of the nature reserve island. Soon after your donation came through we were ready to start. We had everything in place: an agreed plan of action; a reliable contractor; all materials sourced; the lorries, boats and labour force in place to transport materials and equipment; and the work team ready to demolish and remove what remained of the old roof and rebuild the new one, and fit new windows and doors. This may all sound straightforward, but doing this on a small and biologically sensitive island with limited resources took some planning. However, not all quite went to plan as the island’s Critically Endangered Olive white-eyes and Endangered Mauritius fodles started nesting within meters of the building. There was little we could do but wait for the chicks to fledge before building work could resume. Ile autxes AigrUeRtITIUS MA NA D UR TE T: DONATE A R EL L.O R G/D O It was not until February 2013 that the birds finished nesting in the vicinity of the building and the chicks had fledged. Building therefore started and was completed within two weeks. Given the delays, the building came into use the day it was completed. By the end of April 2013 and the end of the breeding season we had managed to hatch 161 Telfair’s skinks and also establish a robust colony of several invertebrate species to feed the growing skinks. The building was completed just before a very large cyclone (approx. 600km in diameter) called Imelda approached Mauritius in April. Fortunately, the island was relatively unaffected, but had the building not been completed we would have lost our juvenile skinks to the heavy rains and strong winds. At this time fledgling seabirds being hand-reared for release were also threatened by Imelda and so the building also became their temporary home. Thank you for your help. Our newly restored and secure skink hatchery and invertebrate breeding room are being used at full capacity and within the next few months the hatchery will start to refill with the next generation of skinks. 21 By Jamie Copsey Gerald Durrell’s wish to recruit the first trainee for the launch of his ‘mini-university’ from the land of the Dodo, was one of the reasons that first took him to Mauritius in the mid-seventies. This visit led to the start of our first sustained overseas programme and record numbers of species recovered, providing textbook case studies of how to save even the most critically endangered species from extinction. We are now embarking on one of our most exciting, challenging ventures since! We are in the process of establishing a ‘campus’ of Durrell Conservation Academy in Mauritius. With more than 100 EDGE (Evolutionarily distinct and Globally Endangered) and approximately 40 AZE (Alliance for Zero Extinction) vertebrate species found within the five islands of Madagascar, Comoros, Mauritius, Seychelles and La Réunion alone, the Indian Ocean represents a globally significant centre of conservation concern. Durrell’s on-going field projects in the region and our long-standing partnerships in the islands place us in an ideal position to help build capacity for species conservation. Our focus will be on developing collaborations within the Indian Ocean, supporting our own field projects and those of our partners. We also hope to bring the region together, encouraging the exchange of skills and experience between the Indian Ocean islands and reaching further into the East-African mainland and South-East Asia. Asia Middle East Africa Maldives Indian Ocean gas car Seychelles Mauritius & Reunion Ja mie Copsey with Te lfa ir’s skink 22 Gilbert Rakotoarisoa, Director of Madagascar’s national zoo Parc Tsimbazaza, was the first Malagasy to do a DESMAN with Durrell after being invited by Gerald Durrell in 1984. On returning to Madagascar he applied what he had learned to his work and was successful in breeding the aye-aye in captivity. Since then, 20 Malagasy professionals have taken part in courses at the Durrell Conservation Academy. By Kitty Brayne Capacity building has become a bit of a buzz-word in conservation. But what we’re really talking about is recognising that a sustainable approach to saving species hinges on having the right people with the right skills in the right place. And this means investing in people over the long-term. Throughout Durrell’s 50 year history, capacity building has been a core aspect of our work. As we set up field programmes we also supported local conservationists to develop their skills. This is no different in Madagascar, where our approach focuses on the Durrell team, conservation professionals from other organisations, students and people from the communities who are working to manage their natural resources and protect biodiversity. Gilbert R a kotoa risoa Our work on capacity building in Madagascar was significantly scaled up in 2004 when we co-founded the Network of Conservation Educators and Professionals (REPC) as part of a consortium of environmental NGOs. The network’s aim is to fill the gap between academic training in biology and the need for practical conservation skills in Madagascar. But ensuring professionals have the skills they need is only part of the equation. Durrell’s vision for conservation involves engaging communities and supporting them to become active managers of their natural environments. Education and local management structures are chronically under-funded in Madagascar, one of the poorest countries in the world, so we 23 The REPC network now links up over 1000 people from 185 different organisations. Leading professionals have developed more than 80 training modules specific to Madagascar, delivered in courses all over the country. na h (Je rsey) Olive r John son, JoDurre ll. R atzi m ba zafy an d Lee Th e R EPC network recognise that for this to happen investment is needed, both in the education system for the next generation of leaders, and through supporting community management associations with tailored training and on-going advice and support. Durrell has also extended the scope of the REPC project to focus on developing courses in environmental and resource management for community leaders, delivered entirely in local dialects of Malagasy. Hen ri ra dio tra ckin g We supported Henri Rakotosalama to complete a Masters degree research project monitoring the ploughshare tortoise reintroduction. In total Durrell has supported over 50 Malagasy students to complete Masters and PhDs. 24 25 Jeff Dawson recently joined Durrell to help coordinate what is perhaps one of the most critical projects in conservation, currently. Amphibians the world over face enormous pressure, and many species could disappear before they are even studied in any detail. However, if there’s one thing Gerald Durrell proved, it’s that passionate people, given the right support, can overcome seemingly impossible odds to save species from extinction. Enter Jeff! “I’d always been interested in wildlife, right from a very early age, with a fascination in all types of animals. Back in the days before the internet, the only path to working with animals seemed to involve becoming a vet, but around sixth-form I changed my mind. I went on to do a Behavioral Science degree, zoology and psychology, and having enjoyed an anthropology module, went on to take an MSc. in paleobiology, the study of extinct flora and fauna. I always had a really broad range of interests, but decided that I’d rather do something practical than become an academic, and conservation seemed the best way to accomplish this. I volunteered in Tanzania, before heading to Madagascar to undertake biodiversity surveys, including lots of herpetology work - frogs and lizards. After a brief spell back in the UK, I spent two years in Papua New Guinea carrying out the first biodiversity surveys in the Waria Valley, eventually becoming Project Manager.” Jeff has worked extensively with local communities around the world, and says the longest he’s lived anywhere other than his parents’ house was in a traditional home in the aforementioned Papua New Guinea. A long-term admirer of Gerald Durrell’s work, he first visited the Wildlife Park here in Jersey at around nine years old, and was working for the RSPB in Montserrat when Durrell’s first mountain chicken frog releases were underway on the island. “As (Durrell) were working at night, and my work was during the day, I helped out as much as possible. Frogs and other amphibians are awesome creatures, and I really enjoyed lending a hand”. Based in Bath, along with Durrell’s Dr. Richard Young, he says he’s “looking forward to the challenges ahead, and starting new projects in conjunction with other organisations, that based on solid science, will acheive great results.” We’re very glad to have Jeff on board, and happy that our ongoing amphibian conservation work is in such good hands! 26 finds new friends for Durrell If you received the last edition of On the Edge, you may have noticed the rather endearing character you see here taking pride of place on the inside cover. If you are a new Member, and this is your first time reading On the Edge, the chances are that this buoyant blue-grey bird needs no introduction, as he brought you to us personally! In either case we’re delighted formally to introduce ‘The Lonely Dodo’. Of course, Durrell has been represented by a dodo since Gerald Durrell personally selected it as the symbol of the then Jersey Wildlife Preservation Trust back in 1963, its fate a stark reminder of why the mission of ‘saving species from extinction’ was, and is, so very necessary. This dodo, however, was created by Academy Award winning cartoonists Aardman Animations in collaboration with The Frameworks and a handful of Durrell staff who really wanted to help people comprehend just what extinction must be like for the last members of a species. The loneliness, and the natural, overwhelming drive to find a mate becoming a more and more frantic struggle, leading ultimately to despair, is a situation we all hate to imagine any living being having to face. This empathy led to Durrell’s founding, and likeminded people, such as yourselves, have allowed us to spare many species from going the way of the dodo in our 50 year history. The fact 27 remains that nature needs friends more than ever, and so who better to tell that story than a dodo who’s on a mission to find a friend? In the sad absence of a real bird, we had to call in top impressionist and long-time conservation supporter Alistair McGowan to give our determined dodo a voice. With such an important story to tell, we left it to a frog. This frog, however, has the rich sonorous tone and inflections of none other than multi-talented multimedia star Stephen Fry! With such an all-star cast giving their time for free, along with Aardman’s awesome animation, we knew the message; ‘it’s too late for the dodo, but doesn’t have to be too late for other animals’, would hit home. Sure enough the YouTube video at The Lonely Dodo’s very own website launched in March, and has so far been viewed by more than 260,000 people! Our dodo has been nominated for two awards so far, and his plight has brought much needed new support for our growing number of conservation projects around the world. If you’d like to meet our lonely bird yourself, or even become a member of ‘The Lonely Dodo Crew’, please go to www.thelonelydodo.com/watch – we value your company, and so will he! 28 Tsanta Fiderana Rakotonanahary loved animals from an early age, growing up in the countryside not far from Madagascar’s capital Antananarivo. But if you’d told her then she would become a specialist in the world’s rarest tortoises and ducks, she would have been a little surprised. Durrell’s hands-on approach to conservation integrates breeding some of the most endangered species in the world in captivity. So we need people with the skills to care for these animals until they can be released into the wild. Setting up a breeding programme for the ploughshare tortoise was our first project in Madagascar over 25 years ago, but Malagasy vets with the right experience were in short supply, so we relied on veterinary support from the reptile specialists at the Wildlife Park. Being home to countless weird, wonderful and threatened endemic animals, Madagascar needs specialist wildlife vets. When we started a new captive breeding programme for the Madagascar pochard we decided to invest in training a Malagasy vet to become part of the Madagascar team. When Durrell offered the opportunity of an internship to veterinary students at the University of Antananarivo, Tsanta jumped at it. Tsanta worked on all aspects of animal health within the Madagascar programme and spent six months in Jersey on the *DESMAN course in captive management. She soon proved herself invaluable in caring for confiscated ploughshare tortoises seized after trafficking attempts, which has unfortunately greatly increased in recent years. She played a major role in developing our quarantine programme which aims to ensure foreign diseases don’t infect the captive and wild populations. When ploughshare tortoises were seized in Thailand this year, Tsanta was the natural person to choose to travel to Bangkok and help with their care, and she is now working to ensure the surviving tortoises return to Madagascar in good health. We are delighted that in August Tsanta successfully qualified as a vet and became a full-time member of the Durrell team. *Durrell Endangered Species Management Graduate Certificate ughshare Tsanta with a baby plo 29 sponsored by As we’ve discovered, blend students from a local school, some modern communications technology, kind sponsorship from Natwest and a selection of Durrell conservation experts, and you end up with a pretty effective platform to reach younger people. ‘I’m a Conservationist’ introduced pupils from Year 8 at Grainville School, Jersey, to field biologists and animal experts around the world who work to save species from extinction. More than 100 pupils used social media, such as Skype and blogs, to communicate directly with the conservationists for one week, learning what the people in the field were doing, how and why. At the end of the week, the pupils voted for the conservationist they felt was making the biggest difference to receive £500 for their species. The eventual winner was Lance Woolaver, for the ploughshare tortoise project in Madagascar. Along the way, the students learned more about the different species as well as the techniques, challenges and science-in-action aspects of conservation. Moreover, for both pupils and conservationists, it was a friendly, fun competition that hopefully inspired future champions of endangered species. Th an ks for the help, Natwe st “It was a great experie nce” 30 Notice Your family... and other animals! This Christmas, how about sharing lucky, plucky lemur ‘Stumpy’, primate Prince ‘Badongo’ or even aptly-named amphibian ‘Bluey’ the poison frog with the animal lover in your life! Many of our adoptees animals are threatened in the wild, so as an adopter, you become ‘one-in-a-million’, and demonstrate that you truly care. You’ll love them just as much as we do. Please visit: durrell.org/adopt to find the perfect match for the animal lover in your life. 31 eboard Join Lee Durrell on a vo ya land of red apes and drag ge to the ons. The Ultimate Travel Com pany have lived up to the ir name and put together the expedition of a lifetime, to be held in October 2014. Following the ancient spi ce trade route to the my stical and exotic islands of Ind onesia, MV Orion – a pur pose built expedition cruise shi p – will take participants to where the wildest reside nts of Borneo and Sumatra still reign, and on to where they can wit ness conservation in action, for a better future for all. Our Honorary Director, Dr. Lee Durrell, will be among st the guest speakers, and the opportunity to visit idy llic coral reefs, a floating ma rket, an orangutan rescue centre and to walk in the territory of huge Komodo dragons will all add up to what can only be called a once in a lifetime experienc e. To download a full brochu re, please visit www.durrell.org/cruise y A lasting legacy In 1947, a you youn y young ung man named Gerald Durrell received an inheritance from his father, to mark his ‘coming of age’... ... the gift funded many animal collecting trips for zoos, but it created an awareness in the young man that the world was changing... Gerald in 1947 ...by 1959, Gerald Durrell had resolved to do his best to change the zoological world... ...and he vowed to leave a legacy that would change the wider world for the better, by saving species from extinction. Durrell Wildlife Conservation Trust has not only kept Gerald Durrell’s life’s work, legacy and wishes alive, but also many species that would otherwise have left this world a poorer place for future generations. Gerald with N’pongo Just like you, we’d like to see a happy, healthy future for those we’ve invested our lives in... ...we’d like to ensure a lasting legacy, a richer world and the ability to thrive, together. oodd Jambo in pensive mood When making your will, we want you to take care of your loved ones first and foremost, but if you’ll entrust us with your legacy too, together, we’ll hand on a better world for them all. r further information on For F Fo leaving a gift to Durrell in your Will, 60 93 8600 M iie on 01534 8 please contact Anne-Mar durrell.org/legacy Jambo and N’pongo’s gran dson Indigo