Category Archives: Conservation
World’s biggest snake threatened by backpackers
The lure of seeing the anaconda in its natural habitat is bringing thousands of British backpackers to a small corner of the Amazon that has become one of the continent’s biggest eco-tourism destinations.
But for the anacondas that live in the swamps surrounding the Yacuma River in northern Bolivia, this invasion of gap year travellers and other hardy tourists is proving disastrous.
Biologists say the entire population of anacondas in one of the jewels of the Amazon basin will be wiped out within three years because of the deadly effect on the snakes of the insect repellant used by most backpackers to help protect against malaria.
The number of tourists going on tours of the pampas that snake there way through jungle and grasslands 250 miles north of La Paz has exploded from a few hundred to nearly 12,000 a year in the past decade.
Travellers are enticed by the promise of getting up close and personal with the world’s largest snake – sometimes picking them up and hlding them – as well as swimming with river dolphins, catching pirhanas, and spotting monkeys, sloths and an array of other flora and fauna.
But sightings of the snake are becoming increasingly elusive and as many as 30 of the awe-inspiring creatures, which can measure up to 30ft in length and are known to strangle and devour prey as diverse as caiman crocodiles and cows, are being found dead every year, according to local guides.
Original story
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/southamerica/bolivia/8216528/Worlds-biggest-snake-threatened-by-backpackers.html
Huge 100 pound African tortoise found roaming Arizona desert
Tortoises native to the Arizona desert rarely grow in excess of about 15 pounds, so imagine the surprise of officials with the Arizona Game and Fish Department when they recently came across a huge 100 pound tortoise living comfortably in the Sonoran Desert.
http://www.mnn.com/lifestyle/pets-animals/stories/huge-100-pound-african-tortoise-found-roaming-arizona-desert
Accused poacher jailed in Jacksonville on charge of killing alligator without a permit
A 51-year-old North Jacksonville man remains in the Duval County jail on a charge of illegal killing of an alligator following his Monday arrest in Nassau County.
John Michael Bennett of the 16000 block of Blyler Road was booked on $5,000 bail after Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission officers picked him up in Nassau County on a warrant and transferred him to Jacksonville, according to jail records.
Bennett is accused of killing an alligator illegally in May. An investigation determined he had skinned it and removed its meat, allowing for a warrant for the charge, according to commission officer Jeff Summers.
American alligators are classified by the state of Florida as a species of special concern and can only be hunted by people who have the proper licenses and permits. Under state rules in place since 1988, alligator harvest quotas are established that allow Floridians and non-residents to kill up to two alligators per permit. Applicants who are awarded a permit must pay for two tags and an Alligator Trapping License, since a state hunting license is not required.
Daily Reptile News Announcement

Ok so by now I think pretty much everyone has heard the announcement. I know I have communicated with several people about it in the last 12 hours. Here is the bottom line, just to lay it out there if I dont figure out a way to at the very least pay the cable bill “internet” next month that DRN in its entirety will be gone for good. Because I own my web server if the connection to the house is cut that means the website will be gone, the ability to update it and upload the show will be gone as well. A had a few fail safes just in case but unfortunately my server is fairly advanced and the backup servers at other locations are not. That being said my fail safe was to move the entire site to one of these other servers for free and host it there until I could figure things out,. As I said though they are far from run of the mill and the site will NOT function on them.
It pains me to see the project that I have been working on for 12 months now start crumbling apart. Making the decision I made to back off on it was in my eyes the ONLY way to try to save even part of it. Most of you know I own a business. While this business is not doing very well right now it is still making money. My hope is that by backing off from DRN and focusing on this business I not only will be able to put more time into it to raise revenue but it will be what not only saves DRN but also saves my house.
When I lost my job I did not see it as a bad thing. At that time I was doing DRN for about 10 months and things were almost growing faster than I could keep up. We were starting to become a driving force, things were happening not because we worked for it to happen persay but because we just picked up the phone and asked for them to happen. People were jumping on board left and right not because of what we were doing or how we were doing it but just because we were doing good. I digress though. I saw loosing my job as a great thing. I could not take 2 things I had a passion for “Reptiles and filming” and make a career out of them. I intensified the work I was doing, taking advantage of every opportunity I could I had to do it, I could not see going back into a career that I did not like.
Now after all this time I look at the following that has been created and still cant believe the did as well as it has but unfortunately things have not worked out the way they were suppose to. I sat and watched people that did not put in nearly a tenth of the work I have pass me up like I was standing still. A lot of promises were made for things that could have greatly helped DRN become much much larger that never happened. Part of me is extremely disappointed in this. I have done every single thing I set out to do and never went back on my word no matter how hard it was to follow through and it panes me to think if one of these things would have happened we could be telling a much different story right now.
For those that follow me and my vlogs very closely you may remember some time ago I talked about a plan, back then I told you if it worked out we are shooting for the stars but if not its over. Well clearly that plan did not happen or has yet to happen so I have held on much much longer that I planned on in the first place. All this being said though this decision is not anyone’s fault. I dont blame anyone for me losing my job and not being about to support this adventure anymore.
When I lost my job my household lost about $4,000 per month of income that we need to make ends meet. I need to now find a way to make that income back up and my #1 priority is to make sure I continue to provide for my family the way they deserve to be provided for. I am taking a huge risk by telling you this as its strictly forbidden but I think you need to see the whole picture to completely understand what is happening. In the past month DRN has made $7.53 there is just no way it is sustainable at that rate. I can live from a %50 cut but before going into this I made that every few minutes so there is no way its a sustainable project at the current schedule.
I have looked for outside sponsors. The website and video alone generate about 3,000 people per day. The videos have been watched by nearly 100,000 people since the started and website has attracted 41,000 page views in the last month. Not long ago I started working on a 30 minute anniversary show and put out the work for advertisers for that but all this has equated to no responses from anyone.
All this being said the game is not over yet. I have until mid January to make this work and when I have the time I am going to be kicking it in the ass to keep it going. We have come to far to just walk away now. The only difference is my public appearances “videos” will be less as I work behind the scenes to try to save what we have built. I wanted to make this announcement now though so if come mid January things have not changed you guys will understand why and not be so shocked if the plug is all of the sudden pulled one day.
I greatly appreciate the help I have gotten and love all the people I have met in the past year and will never forget anyone. I hope to god that something changes very soon so I am able to continue trying to change the world.
Below are not guarantees but are ways that anyone can help DRN
Buy a shirt: http://www.foothillherps.com/news/?page_id=2788
Donate: On the website on the upper let there is a donate button.
DRN Weekly Hard Copy: I have a poll on the website for people interested in a paid weekly hard copy of DRN for their home or business. I am still taking votes on who would be interested in getting this. I am not sure of the cost but because of low volume printing costs I am thinking it would cost about $5 per week. Unfortunately we would need as much as 50 paid subscriptions to make it a viable option
There is one MAJOR way people can help which costs nothing but unfortunately its is a violation of the Adsence TOS for me to tell you how “hint hint”
Egypt’s crocodile hunters jump the gun
Aswan–Illegal crocodile hunting has spiked in recent months following press reports that led people to believe the animal had been taken off Egypt’s protected species list.
“We’ve seen a lot [of evidence] of illegal hunting for crocodiles lately, especially large ones,” said Ashraf Salem, an environmental researcher at the Egyptian Environmental Affairs Agency (EEAA). “Adult crocodiles are killed for their skin, while hatchlings are caught and sold to Arabs and foreigners.”
Egypt’s crocodile population was driven to the brink of extinction in the 1950s by hunting and habitat loss. The construction of the Aswan High Dam in the 1960s gave the animal a chance to recover, and its population has grown steadily behind the dam, where it is relatively undisturbed by human activities.
Salem, who was instrumental in scientific surveys of Egypt’s crocodile population, estimates that there are currently about 3,000 crocodiles in Lake Nasser, some up to five meters in length. The presence of large crocodiles and absence of police surveillance has made the vast, remote reservoir an attractive target for poachers.
Crocodile skins and products are big ticket items on the international market, and many of the 7,000 fishermen on the lake are believed to be involved in the illegal trade. Up to 400 crocodiles are killed for their skins each year, and another 3,000 hatchlings are smuggled out of the country, according to EEAA estimates. Early in the decade the government tabled plans to raise crocodiles on ranches for their skins and meat–-part of its own scheme to exploit the economic value of Lake Nasser’s growing crocodile population.
Last March, Egypt successfully petitioned to transfer the Nile crocodile from Appendix I to Appendix II of the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora (CITES). The new designation removed the main legal hurdle to crocodile ranching, but created widespread confusion over the protected status of the animal.
“When they wrote in the newspapers that they will transfer from Appendix I to II, everyone imagined it became legal to hunt crocodiles, but this was not correct,” said Salem. “If they read carefully they would have seen that this [amendment] does not affect domestic laws protecting crocodiles.”
Egyptian environmental laws forbid killing and capturing crocodiles as well as transporting or trading the animals or their eggs. Pending new legislation, hunting or trade of crocodiles remains prohibited. This hasn’t stopped local fishermen and game hunters from killing crocodiles in Lake Nasser. EEAA officials report a recent surge in poaching activity, particularly of larger crocodiles.
“During our surveys, we found a lot of dead crocodiles without their skins–-all of them over three meters in length,” Salem said. Fishermen who spoke to Al-Masry Al-Youm said that they believe the government has legalized the killing of large crocodiles that “pose a significant threat” to humans. They cite the reluctance of authorities to prosecute fishermen who shoot the animals as evidence that hunting is condoned.
“You’re allowed to shoot any crocodile over four meters,” said Mounir Ibrahim, a local tilapia fisherman. He maintains he has never had reason to kill a crocodile, but says his colleagues often skin crocodiles that get entangled in their nets in order to supplement their meager incomes. “One skin is worth more than all my catch,” he adds.
Some fishermen and tour leaders reportedly moonlight as guides for visiting hunting parties. One local guide agreed to provide guns and camping equipment for a three-day crocodile hunting safari–-provided the group could produce a permit to hunt crocodiles on Lake Nasser. While the EEAA is adamant that such permits do not exist, the guide claimed local security officials routinely issue them “for a fee.”
Staff at The African Angler, an Australian outfit that leads guided fishing safaris to Lake Nasser, say they have received a number of requests for crocodile hunting expeditions, but the firm’s focus remains firmly on high-end fishing safaris. “Trophy hunters are willing to pay a lot of money to hunt crocodiles,” said Youssef Mohamed, the company’s safari operations manager. “In some African countries they pay over $1,000 per crocodile.”
Mohamed, who has spent much of his life on Lake Nasser, is ambivalent toward the reptile that shares the lake with the prized 50-kilogram Nile perch that is his firm’s bread and butter. He disputes claims that crocodiles are responsible for the lake’s declining fish catch, attributing this instead to fluctuating water levels and fishery mismanagement.
Mahmoud Hasseb, EEAA’s director of South Area Protectorates, accuses people of vilifying crocodiles to serve their own economic agenda. He dismisses “highly exaggerated” estimates of the crocodile population and the portrayal of the animal as a ruthless man-eater, as thinly-veiled pretexts to legalize lucrative crocodile hunting and ranching.
“The presence of crocodiles in Lake Nasser is very important for the balance of the lake’s ecosystem,” he says. “They are not dangerous animals; they only attack if they feel threatened or people go near their nest.” There have been less than 10 documented cases of crocodile attacks on humans since the creation of Lake Nasser more than 40 years ago.
Many of these cases involved poachers attempting to collect crocodile eggs or hatchlings. A real problem, argues Mohamed, is that crocodiles often damage fishermen’s nets. “Crocodiles see fish caught in the nets and they go to eat the fish, but get caught in the net and destroy it,” says Mohamed. “Nets cost money, so this is a big problem for fishermen.” He points out that if a fisherman receives compensation for a net damaged by a crocodile he might have neutral feelings toward the animal.
But if crocodiles are taking a bite out of his salary, he would be more inclined to kill the crocodile and sell its skin to offset his losses. While destitute fishermen are the most visible players in the illegal crocodile skin trade, smuggling operations are believed to be controlled by just two or three shadowy kingpins. One local official suggested that if security agencies were more committed to arresting and prosecuting these individuals, the smuggling networks would collapse and the trade would dry up.
Climate change affects toads, salamanders – study
Climate change
is affecting the breeding cycles of toads and salamanders, researchers reported on Tuesday, in the first published evidence of such changes on amphibians.
They documented that two species were breeding later in the autumn than in years past, and two others were breeding earlier in the winter.
Their study, published in the Proceedings of the Royal Society B, adds to a growing body of evidence that climate change is affecting animals.
Other studies have shown some birds in North America and Europe are moving northwards as temperatures rise.
Brian Todd of the University of California, Davis and colleagues set up a net around a wetland in South Carolina starting 30 years ago, and trapped the animals that came and went.
“We analyzed 30 years of data on the reproductive timing of 10 amphibian species … and found the first evidence of delayed breeding associated with climate change,” they wrote in their report.
“We also found earlier breeding in two species. The rates of change in reproductive timing in our study are among the fastest reported for any ecological events,” they added.
The changes coincided with a 1.2 degree C (2.16 degrees F)warming in average overnight temperatures at the site.
“Our results highlight the sensitivity of amphibians to environmental change and provide cause for concern in the face of continued climate warming,” Todd and colleagues concluded.
The dwarf salamander Eurycea quadridigitata and marbled salamander Ambystoma opacum, both autumn-breeding species, arrived significantly later in recent years than at the beginning of the study, they found.
The tiger salamander Ambystoma tigrinum and the Pseudacris ornata or ornate chorus frog, both winter-breeding species, were showing up earlier to breed.
Six other species of frogs and toads did not change the timing of their breeding, the researchers said.