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Lynx pardinus is a reclusive hunter that leads its life as far as possible from humans. It’s a mainly nocturnal animal which prefers woodland or dense scrub as its habitat, and open pastures for hunting its staple diet of rabbit. A lynx needs one rabbit a day to survive.
The lynx, with its distinctive large, tufted ears and woolly side whiskers
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The myxomatosis disease which hit Spain’s rabbit population in the 1950s further reduced numbers, and was followed by another disease which decimated the rabbit population: hemorrhagic pneumonia.
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At Olivilla breeding center, near Santa Elena in Andalucía., an ambitious attempt is being made to transform the animal's fortunes. Here 32 lynxes – a substantial percentage of their total population – are provided with shelter with each cat's behavior being monitored by more than 100 cameras dotted round the center's 20 enclosures. These images are studied by staff working in a control room that has enough TV monitors to do justice to a particle accelerator. "We can see everything they do, which is crucial when the lynx reaches its breeding season in March," says Olivilla's director, María José Pérez. "We can help if a mother gets into trouble, for example."
The high-tech surveillance and assiduous zoological care performed at
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The story of the Iberian lynx project is therefore a modestly happy one – so far, at least. The Iberian lynx is a distinctive, beautiful creature and an iconic animal for Andalucía. Yet it has required a monumental effort by dozens of dedicated young ecologists, vets and others staff to pull it back from the brink of oblivion. Dressed in their distinctive dark fatigues, Lynx Life workers zigzag the region in jeeps, replenishing stocks of rabbits for lynxes to eat, tracking released animals and generally maintaining the animal's wellbeing.
Saving the lynx has also required political action: the introduction of laws
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If the story of the Iberian lynx tells us one thing, it is that saving an endangered mammalian predator from extinction is an extraordinarily difficult, expensive business. On the other hand, the Lynx Life project does demonstrate that it could be done.
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Spring is the most pleasing season in the Sierra Morena in Andalucía (right). The region, home to dozens of estates where deer, red partridge and boar are hunted, is bleached and burned for most of summer and autumn. During the Spring though, the mountains are cool and green. Rivers and streams are in spate, the holm oaks and shrubs – gum cistus, mastic, rockrose and palmetto – were
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Most abundant of all were the rabbits, an animal that is of critical importance to the story of the Iberian lynx. Most carnivores have fairly catholic diets and will kill and eat a range of animals and carrion. The lynx has a very different idea of a good meal, however. It is – more or less – rabbit or nothing, a predilection that is, in turn, closely connected to the lynx's physiology.
Lynx pardinus is small compared with other lynx species, including the North American bobcat and the Eurasian lynx from eastern Europe and Siberia. Adults are about two feet tall and three feet long and weigh around 25lb, about twice the size of a well-fed domestic tomcat. The
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This rabbit-hunting specialism has brought problems. In the 20th century, two major disease outbreaks – myxomatosis in the 60s and viral haemorrhagic disease in the 90s – devastated rabbit populations in Spain.
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However, pockets of rabbits survived around Andújar in the Sierra Morena, its scrub land and fractured granite landscape providing a perfect habitat. Here hovered the last relatively healthy population of
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Thus Lynx Life developed a twin strategy. Workers began trapping lynxes. Old adults were allowed to go free but adolescents were taken to new regions to set up fresh populations that would be sustained by colonies of rabbits established for their delectation. "To create homes for rabbits, we prune trees and shrubs of their branches, lay these down to cover the ground and the rabbits start to make their homes underneath them," says Simon Miguel, the leader of Lynx Life. Pruning trees of lower branches also improves the growth of nuts and fruits and so deer and boar have more to eat, another factor that has begun to make the project popular with landowners.
Before lynxes – typically a young male and female – are released to a new area of wild land, however, they are placed in enclosures and studied to see how they get on with each other. (Usually they do.) These enclosure are surrounded by electrified fences that might belong in Jurassic Park, a testimony to the lithe ease with which Iberian lynxes can climb and jump.
The second part of the Lynx Life strategy is more ambitious. This involves taking young animals bred in captivity – at Olivilla and a second center at El Acebuche, in Doñano on the south coast – and setting them
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It has been a slow, careful business and not everything has gone to plan:
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Source:
The Guardian,"Saving the missing Iberian lynx",by Robin McKie, accessed March 21, 2011
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