Khaleej Times

Porcupines cited near villages bordering Fujairah park

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fujairah — Following last month’s announceme­nt by the Environmen­t Agency – Abu Dhabi (EAD) of the discovery of a species of porcupine in Al Dhafra region of Abu Dhabi, it has now been announced that the elusive species is also present in the Wadi Wurrayah National Park (WWNP) in Fujairah.

A paper just published in the

Journal of Threatened Taxa titled ‘A first confirmed record of the Indian Crested Porcupine Hystrix indica in the United Arab Emirates’, reports that pictures of porcupines were taken at two locations in the park on three separate occasions in 2015 and 2016.

The paper reports that “Longterm occupancy of porcupines was confirmed via social surveys conducted in four villages bordering WWNP. These findings represent a previously unrecorded and most likely isolated subpopulat­ion of H. indica”.

Prior to the publicatio­n of the paper, the presence of porcupines in the UAE was only known from photograph by a camera trap in Abu Dhabi’s Al Dhafra region in December last year.

The original EAD identifica­tion of the animal as a related species, Hystrix cristata, rather than Hystrix

indica, is now believed to have been erroneous.

With the Wadi Wurrayah sightings dating to 2015 and 2016, these now stand as the first-recorded sightings in the UAE.

With a distributi­on throughout southwest and central Asia and in much of the Middle East, including Saudi Arabia and Yemen, the Indian Crested Porcupine is listed as being of ‘Least Concern’ by the Internatio­nal Union for Conservati­on of Nature (IUCN).

The new and isolated records in the UAE may, however, qualify it to be listed as ‘Threatened’ at a national level.

The Fujairah discovery underlines the importance of the Wadi Wurrayah National Park in terms of the UAE’s wildlife.

Mohammed Saif Al Afkham, director general of Fujairah Municipali­ty, highlighte­d the importance of the discovery of the porcupine, which, he said, emphasised the importance of Wadi Wurrayah National Park, not just locally but also globally, as an internatio­nally recognised Ramsar wetland site. It was also declared in July this year as the 2nd Unesco Biosphere Reserve in the UAE.

Al Afkham praised the efforts by the municipali­ty’s team in monitoring and studying the wildlife in the park’s arid and rugged mountain environmen­t. —

 ??  ?? An image of the porcupine released by the Environmen­t Agency – Abu Dhabi.
An image of the porcupine released by the Environmen­t Agency – Abu Dhabi.

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