Mongolian Wild Ass

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Mongolian Wild Ass
Mongolian Wild Ass
Mongolian Wild Ass
Conservation status
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Mammalia
Order: Perissodactyla
Family: Equidae
Genus: Equus
Species: E. hemionus
Subspecies: E. h. hemionus
Trinomial name
Equus hemionus hemionus
Pallas, 1775

The Mongolian Wild Ass (Equus hemionus hemionus, also called Khulan) is a subspecies of the Onager. It may be synonymous with the Gobi Kulan or Dziggetai (Equus hemionus luteus).[1] It is found in Mongolia and northern China, and was previously found in Kazakhstan before it became extinct due to hunting.[2]

The Mongolian Wild Ass's distribution range was dramatically reduced during the 1990s. A 1994-1997 survey estimated its population size at 33,000 to 63,000 individuals over a continuous distribution range encompassing all of southern Mongolia.[3] In 2003, a new survey found approximately 20,000 individuals over an area of 177,563 km² in southern Mongolia.[4] The population estimates of the Mongolia population should be treated with caution due to a lack of proven survey protocols.[5][6] Despite that, the subspecies lost about 50% of its former distribution range in Mongolia in the past 70 years.

The population is declining due to poaching and competition from grazing livestock and the conservation status of the species is evaluated as vulnerable.[1] Since 1953, the Mongolian Wild Ass has been fully protected in Mongolia. The subspecies is also listed at appendix I of the Convention on the International Trade in Endangered Species (CITES) and was added to appendix II of the Convention of Migratory Species in 2002.[7] However, due to human population growth in conjunction with severe winters in the past years [8], the number of conflicts between herders and Mongolian Wild Ass's appear on the increase.

Poaching for meat appears to be an increasing problem in Mongolia. For some parts of the local population, wild ass and other wildlife meat seems to provide a substitute or even a cheap alternative to meat from domestic animals.[9] In 2005, a national survey based on questionnaires, suggested that as many as 4,500 wild asses, about 20% of the whole population, may be poached each year.[10] Moreover, political changes in the early 1990's allowed urban populations to return to nomadic land use, resulting in a sharp increase in human- and livestock numbers in many rural areas.[11][12][13]

Political and socital changes have disrupted traditional land use patterns, weakened law enforcement and also changed attitudes towards the use of natural resources, e.g. making wildlife an “open access” resource.[14] It is expected that the remigration of people and their livestock will result in increased wildlife-human interactions and may well threaten the survival of rare wildlife species in the Gobi Desert.

[edit] References

  1. ^ a b IUCN Red List Equus hemionus ssp. hemionus
  2. ^ Clark, B. and Duncan, P. 1992. Asian Wild Asses - Hemiones and Kiangs (E. hemionus Pallas and E. kiang Moorcroft). In: P. Duncan (ed.) Zebras, Asses, and Horses. An Action Plan for the Conservation of Wild Equids. IUCN/SSC Equid Specialist Group. IUCN, Gland, Switzerland. pp. 17-21.
  3. ^ Reading, R. P., H. M. Mix, B. Lhagvasuren, C. Feh, D. P. Kane, S. Dulamtseren, and S. Enkhbold. 2001. Status and distribution of khulan (Equus hemionus) in Mongolia. Journal of Zoology, London, 254:381-389.
  4. ^ Mongolian Ministry of Nature and Environment. 2003. Status and distribution of the khulan in Mongolia in 2003. Unpublished report, Mongolian Ministry of Nature and Environment, Ulaanbaatar, Mongolia
  5. ^ Buckland, S.T., D.R. Anderson, K.P. Burnham, J.L. Laake, D.L. Borchers and L. Thomas. 2001. Introduction to Distance Sampling. 432pp. Oxford University Press, Oxford UK and New York USA.
  6. ^ Kaczensky P. and C. Walzer. 2002a, 2002b, 2003a, 2003b. Przewalski horses, wolves and khulans in Mongolia. Bi-annual progress reports. available from: www.takhi.org
  7. ^ CMS 2002. Convention on Migratory Species. Appendix II.
  8. ^ United Nations Disaster Management Team (UNDMT): National Civil Defence and State Emergency Commission Ulaanbaatar. 2000. DZUD 2000-Mongolia: An evolving ecological, social and economic disaster: A rapid needs assessment report. United Nations Disaster Management Team (UNDMT): National Civil Defence and State Emergency Commission Ulaanbaatar
  9. ^ P. Kaczensky & O. Gambatar unpubl. Data
  10. ^ J. Wingard unpubl. data
  11. ^ Fernandez-Gimenez, M. E. 1999. Sustaining the Steppes: A Geographical History of Pastoral Land Use in Mongolia. Geographical Revue, 89(3):315-342.
  12. ^ Bedunah, D. J. and S. M. Schmidt. 2004. Pastoralism and protected area management in Mongolia's Gobi Gurvansaikhan National Park. Development and Change, 35(1):167-191.
  13. ^ Mearns, R., D. Shombodon, G. Narangerel, U. Tuul, A. Enkhamgalan, B. Myagmarzhav, A. Bayanjargal, and B. Bekhsuren. 1994. Natural resource mapping and seasonal variations and stresses in Mongolia. RRA Notes, 20:95-105.
  14. ^ Pratt, D. G., D. C. MacMillan, and I. J. Gordon. 2004. Local community attitudes to wildlife utilisation in the changing economic and social context of Mongolia. Biodiversity and Conservation, 13:591–613.