Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Youths band together to protect elusive fishing cat

- By Malaka Rodrigo

On the heels of last week’s story of innocent animals dying in collisions with speeding vehicles is a positive report of young people erecting road signs to prevent Sri Lanka’s secondlarg­est wild cat falling prey to careless motorists. The first signs went up last week at Gannoruwa and Haloluwa critical fishing cat death sites in the Kandy district.

The fishing cat (Prionailur­us viverrinus), commonly known in Sri Lanka as hadun diviya, is the second largest wild cat in Sri Lanka and grows up to two and half feet in length. As the name implies, its primary meal is fish so it is found near wetlands or river ecosystems.

The internatio­nal Red List on Conservati­on Status of Animals and Plants lists the fishing cat as “endangered”, just a few steps away from extinction.

Fishing cats die on the roads due to their territoria­l behaviour as they move daily through a specific area. Most forests are now fragmented, so inevitably fishing cats need to cross roads, making them vulnerable to collision accidents, explained Ashan Thudugala of the Small Cat Conservati­on Alliance.

Mr. Thudugala, who spearheade­d this project, said that based on data gathered over the past 18 months his group identified stretches of roads at Gannoruwa and Halloluwa as extremely prone to collisions between vehicles and these wild cats.

The fishing cat is a lovely animal but has earned a negative reputation in local communitie­s as, being opportunis­tic hunters, they often raid poultry farms. Local population­s of fishing cats are under threat due to poisoning, hunting pressure, and habitat destructio­n. Mr. Thudugala released a fishing cat that had become entangled in a wire trap in Polgolla a few weeks ago, indicating wire traps too could be a growing problem for this threatened wild cat.

The fishing cat lives hidden in many habitats where they co-exist with humans, so Mr. Thudugala and the team organise awareness programme and youth camps to change the public’s views about this elusive cat that lives close to them.

The first awareness session was held earlier this year for schoolchil­dren and the second for a selected number of university students who later began assisting the project.

At present, the Small Cat Conservati­on Alliance is focusing its study and data-gathering on fishing cats in the Kandy, Matale, Nuwara Eliya and Kegalle districts but is planning to expand efforts islandwide.

Mr. Thudugala is thankful to those who supported the road sign project; they include personnel at the Department of Zoology at the University of Peradeniya, officers of the Road Developmen­t Authority, the police, and the in Mohamed Bin Zayed Species Conservati­on Fund. Such road signs will be placed throughout the country to protect this magnificen­t creature.

Instead of cursing the darkness, it is always better to light a candle – so the effort by Ashan Thudugala and his team to save these threatened animals is indeed commendabl­e.

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 ??  ?? Fishing cat in pain - caught by wire trap inPologoll­a and saved by AshanThudu­gala
Fishing cat in pain - caught by wire trap inPologoll­a and saved by AshanThudu­gala
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