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From Dream to Reality

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Snow Leopard Trust has launched a new, long-term study of snow leopards with the establishment of the J. Tserendeleg Snow Leopard Research Center in Mongolia’s South Gobi Province.

The first long-term study of snow leopards has been launched with the establishment of the J. Tserendeleg Snow Leopard Research Center! The center is located in Mongolia, in the South Gobi Province, the country's best cat habitat, and an area where we have been working for more than a decade.

The research center currently consists of three gers (yurts) and is already home to international scientists and graduate students from Mongolia, India, Sweden, the US, and Argentina. This team has wasted no time and is already busy conducting camera trap and genetic studies.

The most ambitious undertaking this year will be the initiation of GPS collaring of snow leopards in July. The new generation of collars the team will deploy uses satellite phone technology to uplink multiple GPS locations a day for each collared cat.

The findings from this collaring
project will add greatly to our knowledge of snow leopards, especially when viewed in conjunction with a similar study that will be initiated by the Snow Leopard Conservancy elsewhere in Mongolia later this summer. The two studies are complimentary and will share data for the betterment of the species.

The center will be staffed year-round, and several local residents will be employed to provide logistical support and serve as field assistants on the various study components.  Over the next 10 to 15 years the center is expected to grow and eventually include an information center for local people and tourists, as well as a larger training and education center that will host scientists and graduate students from around the region.

The facility was named in honor of one of Mongolia’s most respected conservationists, the late J. Tserendeleg, who was instrumental in establishing the first radio-collaring study of snow leopards in Mongolia in the early 1990s in collaboration with George Schaller and Tom McCarthy.

The study is a collaborative effort of the Snow Leopard Trust, Snow Leopard Conservation Fund, the Mongolian Ministry of Nature and Environment, the Mongolian Institute of Biology, Felidae Conservation Fund, Panthera, and the Wildlife Conservation Society.

 


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