- Zanzibar Leopard
Taxobox
name = Zanzibar Leopard
image_caption = Mounted specimen in the Zanzibar Museum
(photo by Helle V. Goldman & Jon Winther-Hansen)
status = PE
trend = down
regnum =Animal ia
phylum = Chordata
classis =Mammal ia
ordo =Carnivora
familia =Felidae
genus = "Panthera "
species = "P. pardus"
subspecies = "P. p. adersi"
trinomial = "Panthera pardus adersi"
trinomial_authority = (Pocock, 1932)The Zanzibar Leopard ("Panthera pardus adersi") is an elusive and possibly extinctsubspecies ofleopard endemic to Unguja Island in theZanzibar archipelago, part ofTanzania . Increasing conflict between people and leopards in the 20th century led to their demonization and determined attempts to exterminate them. Efforts to develop a leopard conservation programme in the mid-1990s were shelved when wildlife researchers concluded that there was little prospect for the animal's long-term survival.Evolutionary history
The
evolution ary history of the Zanzibar Leopard parallels that of other endemics on Unguja, including theZanzibar Servaline Genet and theZanzibar Red Colobus . It is thought to have evolved in isolation from theAfrican Leopard since at least the end of the lastice age , when the island was separated from mainland Tanzania by risingsea level s. Thefounder effect andadaptation to local conditions produced a smaller leopard than its continental relatives and one which “changed its spots”, or rather saw its more numerous rosettes partially disintegrate into spots.cite book | author = Pakenham, R.H.W. | year = 1984 | title = The Mammals of Zanzibar and Pemba Islands | location = Harpenden | publisher = privately printed] cite book | author = Kingdon, J. | year = 1989 | title = Island Africa: The Evolution of Africa's Rare Animals and Plants | location = Princeton | publisher =Princeton University Press ]Biology and behaviour
The
biology and behaviour of the Zanzibar Leopard are poorly understood. Only five skins have been located in museums, including the type specimen in theNatural History Museum, London , and a much-faded mounted specimen in theZanzibar Museum .cite journal | author = Walsh, M.T. & Goldman, H.V. | year = 2003 | title = The Zanzibar Leopard Between Science and Cryptozoology | journal = Nature East Africa | volume = 33 | issue = 1/2 | pages = 14–16] The Zanzibar Leopard has never been studied in the wild and the last time a researcher claimed in print to have seen one was in the early 1980s.Swai, I.S. (1983). "Wildlife Conservation Status in Zanzibar". Unpublished M.Sc. dissertation,University of Dar es Salaam .] Most zoologists presume the Zanzibar Leopard to be extinct or very nearly so.Stuart, C. & Stuart, T. (1997). "A Preliminary Faunal Survey of South-eastern Unguja (Zanzibar) with Special Emphasis on the Leopard" Panthera pardus adersi. African-Arabian Wildlife Research Centre, Loxton, South Africa.] However, Zanzibar government statistics indicate that leopards were still being killed by hunters in the mid-1990s, and islanders continue to report sightings and thepredation oflivestock .cite journal | author = Goldman, H.V. & Walsh, M.T. | year = 2002 | title = Is the Zanzibar Leopard ("Panthera pardus adersi") Extinct? | journal = Journal of East African Natural History | volume = 91 | issue = 1/2 | pages = 15–25 | doi = 10.2982/0012-8317(2002)91 [15:ITZLPP] 2.0.CO;2 | doilabel = 10.2982/0012-8317(2002)91[15:ITZLPP]2.0.CO;2]Demonization and extermination
Rural Zanzibaris’ descriptions of the leopard and its habits are coloured by the widespread
belief that a large number of thesecarnivore s are kept by witches and sent by them to harm or otherwise harass villagers. This belief comes together with an elaborate package of ideas about how leopards are bred, trained, exchanged and sent to do the evil bidding of their owners. For local farmers this supplies a neat explanation forpredation by leopards, and more generally for their appearance "out of place" in the vicinity of farms and villages.cite web | author = Goldman, H.V. & Walsh, M.T. | year = 1997 | url = http://dccff.com/archives/tp063.pdf/ | title = A Leopard in Jeopardy: An Anthropological Survey of Practices and Beliefs which Threaten the Survival of the Zanzibar Leopard ("Panthera pardus adersi") | work = Zanzibar Forestry Technical Paper No. 63, Jozani-Chwaka Bay Conservation Project, Commission for Natural Resources, Zanzibar | accessdate = 2007-01-17]The growth of human
population andagriculture in the 20th century was largely responsible for this state of affairs, as people encroached on the habitat of leopards and the animals they preyed upon. Increasing conflict with leopards and the fear that this generated led to a series of campaigns to exterminate them. These were localized at first, but became island-wide after theZanzibar Revolution of 1964, when a combined anti-witchcraft and leopard-killing campaign was launched under the leadership of Unguja’s most famous witch-finder,Kitanzi . The long-term result of this campaign and the subsequent classification of leopards as “vermin ” was to bring them to the brink ofextinction .Conservation and other proposals
Serious attention was not paid to the Zanzibar leopard's plight until the mid-1990s, by which time some authorities were already listing it as extinct.cite book | author = Nowell, K. & Jackson, P. | year = 1996 | title = Wild Cats | location = Gland, Switzerland | publisher =
IUCN ] A leopard conservation programme was drafted by the CARE-funded Jozani-Chwaka Bay Conservation Project, but abandoned in 1997 when wildlife researchers failed to find evidence for the leopard's continuing presence in and aroundJozani Forest .Local wildlife officials, however, have remained more optimistic about the leopard's survival, and some Zanzibaris have proposed approaching alleged leopard keepers in order to ask them to display their leopards to paying visitors. Villagers sometimes offer to take tourists or researchers to see "domesticated" leopards in return for cash, but so far none of these "kept leopard chases" has been known to end in a successful sighting.Marshall, S. (1994). "The Status of the Zanzibar Leopard". SIT Tanzania & Commission for Natural Resources, Zanzibar.] Selkow, B. (1995). "A Survey of Villager Perceptions of the Zanzibar Leopard". SIT Tanzania & Commission for Natural Resources, Zanzibar.]
References
External links
* [http://www.dccff.com/ Department of Commercial Crops, Fruits & Forestry (DCCFF), Zanzibar]
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