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23 Sep  Category: RAG Reports

SAPS report on September Crime at BCPF meeting

Sup. Thapeli informed the BCPF meeting that there has been a decrease year-on-year in crime during September. Capt. Ramatladi advised that there were 225 cases reported last year from 1-15 September in comparison to 168 this year.
  • Contact crimes: 3 last year 2 this year
  • Business robberies 4 last year 1 this year
  • Burglary residential 10 last year 7 this year
  • Car hijacking 3 last year 2 this year
  • House robbery 5 last year 1 this year
  • Download the crime stats for Gauteng as a whole
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22 Sep  Category: Conservation & Environment

Canned Lion hunting appeal dismissed!

The Free State High Court, on the 28th September 2009, dismissed an application by South African Predator Breeders Association for leave to appeal a ruling made in July that effectively puts an end to the practice of “canned lion hunting”.

The SAPBA took the Department of Environmental Affairs to court over their decision to ban the hunting of a captive bred lion in under 24 months post its release into a free-ranging environment. This ruling, and the subsequent decision declining them leave to appeal, effectively ensures that captive bred lions cannot be hunted as so-called ‘canned trophies'.

The Endangered Wildlife Trust (EWT) is pleased with this decision which we see as a move in the right direction to ensure that ethical standards are introduced back into the consumptive utilisation of wildlife as a resource.

Less positive however, is the sudden increase in poaching of White and Black Rhino with at least 84 rhinos being poached in this country between January and September this year. Rhino remain secure as a species, but this worrying trend presents a major challenge to private and government conservationists alike, as the driving force behind this trend seems to have far greater resources and an insatiable market that may well spell disaster for this species in the next few years.

Unfortunately this upward trend in the trade in threatened species is not limited to rhino and we are noticing similar trends in the trade in wild birds (and their products) and a number of other species. It seems that despite global threats to biodiversity such as climate change and habitat destruction, direct persecution of wildlife remains an ongoing threat to many species and presents a significant challenge for the EWT. To find out more about what the EWT is doing to address this trade, please visit our website.

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19 Sep  Category: Conservation & Environment

How Birds See is Key to Avoiding Power Line Collision

Conservationists at the Endangered Wildlife Trust (EWT) have, with the financial support of Eskom, undertaken a research project to better understand how birds see, in the hope that this will help them to prevent birds from flying into power lines.

“Many of our bird species are prone to colliding with overhead power lines whilst in mid flight” says Jon Smallie, Manager of the EWT’s Wildlife & Energy Interaction Group (EWT-WEIG), which incorporates a long-standing strategic partnership with Eskom. “To solve this problem, conservationists and electrical utilities around the world have, over the last 30 years, developed various marking devices that aim to make power lines more visible to the birds. These devices have largely been developed based on what we think birds can see, but bird vision is fundamentally different from human vision. We hope that with a better understanding of how birds see their surroundings, we will be able to design improved marking devices and ultimately save more birds.”

Preliminary findings show that bird families differ in their ability to see, and that several of the relevant species have far better peripheral than frontal vision. This has major implications for collision with power lines that are invariably in front of birds in flight. Drawing a bird’s attention to the front, in order to see an overhead power line, may be even more important than previously thought. The final results of the study will be ready by early 2010 and will be published on the EWT’s website at www.ewt.org.za. The EWT intends to incorporate this new knowledge into the design of marking devices as soon as possible through its strategic partnership with Eskom.

Graham Martin – Professor of Avian Sensory Science at the University of Birmingham - is an international expert in bird vision. Professor Martin has developed a method for measuring bird visual fields (where they see) and acuity (how well they see) and is instrumental in this project, leading the research that will help the EWT understand how large birds, which are particularly prone to flying into power lines, experience the world while in flight.

Professor Martin recently spent two weeks in South Africa, measuring visual fields on Blue Cranes (Anthropoides paradiseus), White Storks (Ciconia ciconia) and Kori Bustards (Ardeotis kori), all species that are frequently killed as a result of flying into power lines. This is the first time that research of this nature has been undertaken with regard to bird power line collisions. Data were collected using captive birds at two participating institutions. Tygerberg Zoo in Cape Town and the Johannesburg Zoo provided four Blue Cranes and two White Storks and a Kori Bustard respectively.

Various different power line marking devices are currently available, but all are installed five to 10 metres apart along power lines that are considered to be of collision risk to birds. While these devices have been effective in reducing the number of collisions, they do not completely eliminate deaths and effectiveness varies between bird families. The EWT-WEIG is working with Eskom to improve their effectiveness. The unique Eskom-EWT Strategic Partnership started 13 years ago in response to problems such as bird collision and is a world leader in addressing this major unnatural cause of death in large birds.

This groundbreaking research is funded by Eskom and was undertaken in collaboration with Professor Graham Martin of Birmingham University, and University of Cape Town Phd student Jessica Shaw. The Tygerberg and Johannesburg Zoos provided captive birds, and expert bird handling expertise.

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18 Sep  Category: Conservation & Environment

Saddle-billed Stork Photographic Survey

Join the Endangered Wildlife Trust and SANParks in a photographic survey of Saddle-billed Storks in the Kruger National Park. The survey started on 1 September 2009 and will run for a full calendar year.

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Archive

2009/2010 Capital Budgets announced admin @ (17 Sep) (RAG Reports)
New Committee welcomed in Ward 20 admin @ (15 Sep) (Local News)
"Most Wanted" caught in Bedfordview admin @ (14 Sep) (Security News)
Inspection Report admin @ (10 Sep) (Security News)
Research on residential Robberies admin @ (07 Sep) (Security News)


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