Bangkok Post

Hundreds of snow leopards killed yearly

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COPENHAGEN: Hundreds of snow leopards are killed illegally every year in remote mountains from China to Tajikistan, further endangerin­g the big cats that number only a few thousand in the wild, a report said yesterday.

Prices ranged up to US$10,000 (about 351,000 baht) for the carcasses, prized for thick light-coloured fur with dark spots, according to the study by Traffic, an internatio­nal network which monitors wildlife trade. An estimated 221 to 450 snow leopards were killed annually since 2008 despite bans in 12 Asian nations where they live, it said.

Traffic said there were many uncertaint­ies because the leopards live in inaccessib­le regions including the Himalayas. About half were shot by farmers to protect goats, sheep and other livestock, with many carcasses then sold, it said. Others were targeted by poachers or trapped in snares meant to catch other animals such as deer. Still, it said there were some successes in protecting the animals. Only one leopard skin was found on sale in the central Chinese city of Linxia in a 2011 survey, against 60 in 2007.

A Red List of endangered species estimates the global population of snow leopards at between 4,080 and 6,590. Internatio­nal trade in snow leopards has been banned since 1975.

Before that, according to Traffic, one 1960s US fur coat advertisem­ent, for

instance, said: “Untamed ... the Snow Leopard, provocativ­ely dangerous. A mankiller. Born free in the wild whiteness of the high Himalayas only to be snared as part of the captivatin­g new fur collection”.

 ??  ?? A snow leopard walks in its enclosure at the RZSS Highland Wildlife Park near Kincraig Scotland, Britain, on
Feb 12.
A snow leopard walks in its enclosure at the RZSS Highland Wildlife Park near Kincraig Scotland, Britain, on Feb 12.

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