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Philippine­s’ rare dwarf buffalo charges against extinction

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THE population of the Philippine­s’ dwarf buffalo, one of the world’s rarest animals, has grown to its largest since efforts to save them from extinction began, conservati­onists said Friday.

An annual survey counted 382 tamaraws in a protected mountain area this year, an increase from 345 in 2013, according to data from the World Wildlife Fund (WWF).

The tamaraw, famed for its distinct v-shaped horns, can be found only in the mountains of Mindoro, a farming island in the central Philippine­s.

The stocky tamaraw, with its chocolate brown coat, runs wild in the forest and weighs half as much as the more common carabao, which is used by farmers in the Philippine­s to plow rice fields.

“The tamaraw is the flagship species of the Philippine­s. It is our moral obligation and internatio­nal commitment to preserve them,” forest ranger Rodel Boyles, who heads a joint government and private sector conservati­on effort, told AFP.

“If they are not protected, the species might get wiped out in five years,” he said.

The tamaraw is considered “critically endangered” — two steps away from extinction — by the Internatio­nal Union for Conservati­on of Nature.

Hunting and the destructio­n of their habitat to make way for grazing areas for cattle led to their near decimation, as the population fell from 10,000 in the 1900s to just 154 by 2000, according to the WWF.

The government and private sector’s Tamaraw Conservati­on Programme aims to double the dwarf buffalo’s population from 300 in the mid-2000s to 600 by 2020, Gregg Yan, a local spokesman for the WWF told AFP.

This requires ramping up forest patrols to ward off poachers and installing hidden cameras in the mountains to better understand the behavior of the beast, Yann said.

A team of 30 forest rangers patrol a 37-acre portion of a mountain that is considered the buffalo’s “core habitat,” Boyles said.

“They are hunted down for food and trophy. When a species is rare, their price in the black market also goes up,” he said.

Boyles said conservati­onists had held meetings with locals to discourage them from eating tamaraw meat. “People also have this misconcept­ion that the flesh of wild animals taste better than farmed ones,” he said.

The effort is paying off as the tamaraw population has been increasing every year for the last 12 years, WWF data shows.

This year’s survey also showed an increased number of young tamaraws, indicating that they have been reproducin­g in the wild, Boyles said, adding past attempts at captive breeding have failed.

“We are hopeful that their numbers will continue increasing,” he said.

 ??  ?? THREATENED: A tamaraw family grazing along the Iglit-Baco mountain range in Occidental Mindoro, southwest of Manila. (AFP)
THREATENED: A tamaraw family grazing along the Iglit-Baco mountain range in Occidental Mindoro, southwest of Manila. (AFP)

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