We only have a few days left, please send the link to our campaign to friends, family, and colleagues who may be willing to donate to our cause! We appreciate all of your support!
Help us rescue and rehabilitate juvenile tapirs caught for the illegal pet trade in Nicaragua. Even $5-$10 will help us toward our goal, please donate!
UPDATE: Please continue to donate during the last week of the campaign. We will receive the money even if the goal is not attained and we will use all of it to begin construction of the rescue center infrastructure!
Recent press:
http://news.mongabay.com/2013/1010-hance-interview-jordan.html
http://www.nicaraguadispatch.com/news/2013/10/nicaragua-hopes-to-save-tapirs-from-extinction/8239
http://www.ticotimes.net/More-news/News-Briefs/Nicaragua-pushes-plan-for-breeding-at-risk-tapirs_Sunday-September-29-2013
Who are we and what is our story?
We are a group of researchers and conservationists working
together to save Baird’s tapirs in Nicaragua.
Baird’s tapirs, large charismatic relatives of horses and rhinos, are endangered at a global level due to habitat loss,
hunting, and the illegal pet trade.
Nicaragua’s Caribbean Coast harbors a globally important population of
this incredible species. Check out our video, they really are special animals.
Working in conjunction with the Nicaraguan National Zoo we
came to realize that the illegal capture of tapir young to sell as pets is a
serious threat to wild tapirs. Part of
the problem is that the only wildlife rescue center in the country is near
Managua, the country’s capital city near the Pacific Coast, whereas the
country’s remaining wild tapirs survive on the Caribbean coast where there are
few roads and transportation is extremely difficult. The logistical difficulty of transporting
Baird’s tapirs, a wild species that can reach over 600 pounds, from one coast
to the other, means that environmental law enforcers have never worked to
actively confiscate the species. Thus
this illegal market was always uncontrolled.
In late 2012, we began the planning stages to open a Tapir
Rescue, Rehabilitation, and Re-introduction Center in the Wawashang Reserve in
Caribbean Coast Nicaragua. We discussed
the project with the Ministry of Natural Resources and with the Ecological
Battalion of the Nicaraguan Army and ensured that we would have their full
support. Then we reached an agreement
with FADCANIC (www.fadcanic.org.ni), the managers of a private, 650 hectare reserve called Kahka Creek within the larger Wawashang
Reserve giving us permission to build the Reserve Center infrastructure within
their forest. The 650 hectares of
well-protected lowland tropical forest constitute ideal habitat for
rehabilitating tapirs. Indeed before
development of cattle ranching made this forest an island, wild tapirs once
thrived there.
We continued our efforts to find collaborators and arrange
the proper permits. Then in March, First
Lieutenant Javier Davila of the Nicaraguan army informed us that his troop had
confiscated a tapir and had nowhere to care for her, thus intended to leave her
under our custody. We immediately
traveled to the tapir’s location and helped to transport her to the site of our
rescue center.
The tapir, who we named Batata after the region where she
was born, was severely underweight, malnourished, and infested with parasites. We began to treat and care for Batata and she
slowly recovered. When she first
arrived, she was listless and docile, but within a week she began to run and
jump through the forest and joyfully dive into the rivers. Over the past several months, she has gained
over 250 pounds and is developing into a healthy tapir adult.
Unfortunately Batata was accustomed to humans from her life
before she arrived on our doorstep and we do not believe she can be safely
released into forests with predators and hunters. Thus she will live her life with us in the
rescue center with other tapirs, including several we intend to bring from the
National Zoo, and her offspring will be candidates for introduction to the
wild. When she was small, we took her
out with us into the forest during the days for her to swim and browse. But now Batata is getting to the age where
she is becoming more independent, thus we need to build an enclosure or we fear
she will attempt to disperse and end up in a cattle pasture of someone not
quite as friendly as we are.
What do we need?
We are running this campaign because we hadn’t expected to
receive a rescued tapir at this stage in our project’s development, never mind
a permanent resident. Thus we had not
yet raised the funds to build a proper enclosure in the forest where tapirs can
live in natural conditions with little human intervention. With $10,000 we can purchase enough fencing and related materials and hire the local carpenter to build the enclosure we need to both care for Batata and officially open our
rescue center. Then we will be prepared to fully launch our campaign to stop the illegal trade of baby tapirs as pets in Caribbean coast
Nicaragua. We believe that the survival
of wild tapirs in Caribbean coast Nicaragua depends on our work, so please join
our team and help make a difference for this beautiful species.
We will invest all of the contributions we receive in the construction of the enclosure. Any funds left over will go directly to food and veterinary supplies for Batata and future tapirs.
What will be the impact of your contribution?
Your contribution will directly contribute to saving animals tragically caught up in the illegal trade of juvenile Baird's tapirs in Nicaragua. We have everything in place with the authorities and our project team to work effectively to save the tapirs that remain for sale in Nicaragua. We just need to build this large enclosure to hold confiscated tapirs and to care for Batata over the long term.
We will work hard on our campaign to stop the illegal wildlife trade in Nicaragua and keep you updated on our progress.
How else can you help?
Any type of contribution will be useful to us. We would love to collaborate with more reporters, teachers, zoos, researchers, and conservationists. So please get in touch with any ideas you may have for how you can help us!
And please spread the word about our campaign to your friends and help us save tapirs in Nicaragua!
Photos of the trees we planted for some of our donors!
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