In
The Wild
Painted
Dog Conservation: Rehabilitation Facility
Gregory
Rasmussen
Wildlife Conservation Research Unit,
Dept Zoology, Oxford University
Map
Location 1, Zimbabwe
The rehabilitation facility
in Zimbabwe caters to African wild dogs during the critical
period after serious injury,
translocation from hostile regions and orphaned puppies
from natural or anthropogenic events until they can be returned
to their natal pack or reintroduced to a favorable environment.
Botswana Wild Dog Research Project
Dr.
J.W. (Tico) McNutt, Botswana Predator Conservation Program
Botswana
Wild Dog Research Project (PDF)
Map
Location 2, Botswana
*Monitoring
of wild dogs in the core study area
*
Biofence project is a
multi-year project designed to understand territoriality
in wild dogs and what they say to
each other through scent dispersal and olfactory receptors.
*
Home range - territory
analysis data provides an account of the ranging behaviors
of neighboring wild dog
packs and a clear illustration of pack territorial boundaries.
*
People, Parks
and Predator Management Project establish a relationship
of communication with the farmers,
game ranchers and other resource users in the areas adjacent to the core
study area and in the farming areas of the northern
Kalahari.
*
Home range, territoriality and conflict in marginal
Wild Dog habitats identify the range and extent of predator
conflict in these relatively dry habitats with longer-term goals to
estimate the wild dog population in the vast
marginal
habitats of southern and western Botswana.
Conservation and Management Of The
African Wild Dog Metapopulation And Its Habitat In Eastern
Zambia
Kellie Leigh
African
Wild Dog Conservation Eastern Zambia
Conservation
and Management of African Wild Dog Metapopulation and
its habitat in eastern Zambia 2005-2007 (PDF)
Map Location 3, Zambia
Collaborate with the Zambian Wildlife Authority
to secure sufficient habitat to allow natural dispersal between
wild
dog populations in the Lower Zambezi and South Luangwa
National Parks, by formation of a wildlife corridor through
existing
Game Management Areas (GMA's)
Extend the current research
and education program to build community support and create
a long-term wild dog conservation
and monitoring program in the region.
Collaborate with
the Zambian Wildlife Authority, to build capacity and ensure
implementation of an on-going conservation
management plan for the local wild dog populations.
Augment
the size of the local population of African wild dogs through
an introduction program aimed at restocking
the Lower Zambezi area, based on AWDC research results Health,
Reproduction and Animal Well-being in Reintroduced African
Wild Dogs
Dr. Micaela Szykman
Sponsored by Smithsonian National Park Conservation and Research Center
Map
Location 4, South Africa
Research
Goals:
* Conduct pre & post reintroduction fecal steroid assessments.
* Document and evaluate current successful pack formations for future reintroductions.
* Songasen's research will assist the field element of this study through method
development and information evaluation of the captive population.
Dynamics of Captive Pack Formation in the African Wild Dog
Dr. Kim McCreery and Dr. Robert RobbinsSponsored byAfrican Wild Dog Conservancy,
Tuscon, AZ
Map
Location 5, Kenya
Research
Goals:
* Study the factors affecting aggression in the captive
population. The
level of aggression seen in captive packs is rarely observed in the wild.
* Video data of interactions between newly formed packs will be collected and
analyzed.
Community-based
Study of the Conservation Status and Ecology of the
African Wild Dog in Southeastern Kenya
Dr. Robert Robbins and Dr. Kim McCreery
Sponsored byAfrican Wild Dog Conservancy, Tuscon, AZ
Map
Location 5, Kenya
Research
Goals:
* Collect census data on two endangered mammals of the region: African wild
dog and the hirola
* Train locals in field research techniques.
* Survey resident population's attitudes towards African wild dogs.
* Identify the threats to the two endangered populations.
* Assist the local governments and NGO's with the development of a conservation
program.
Samburu-Laikipia
Wild Dog Project
Dr. Rosie Woodroffe,
Department of Wildlife, Fish & Conservation Biology,
University of California-Davis
Map
Location 6, Kenya
This
project is concerned with the sustainable coexistence of
African wild dogs with local people and their domestic
animals, in Samburu and Laikipia Districts, Kenya.
The project currently has three key objectives:
- To
develop sustainable methods to protect wild dogs from
infectious disease
- To
encourage tolerance for wild dogs by generating income
through ecotourism
- To
identify critical landscape connections by characterising
wild dogs' movement patterns
At Zoos
Understanding
the Reproductive Biology of the African Wild Dog for
Improved Management and Conservation
Nucharin Songasen
Sponsored by Smithsonian
National Park Conservation
and Research Center
Research Goals:
* Link reproductive endocrinology (hormone assays) with
corticoid assays. Fecals will need to be collected
from 10.10 animals in the SSP population.
* A behavior questionnaire will be developed to compliment
the data gathered from the fecal assays.
* Semen evaluation and cryopreservation methods will be developed.
* Post-mortem evaluation of ovaries to study the identifying
factors in large litters.
Evaluation
of the GNRH Agonist Implant Deslorelin for Contraception
in Carnivores
Dr. Cheri Asa
Sponsored by St. Louis Zoological Park
Research
Goals:
* The AZA Wildlife Contraception Center is sponsoring a basic research study
of the efficacy of the gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH) agonist deslorelin
(Suprelorin®) in implant form.
* Deslorelin effects contraception by temporarily suppressing the reproductive
endocrine system, preventing production of pituitary and gonadal hormones.
* Record any signs of estrous behavior, male sexual interest, mounting or copulation.
* Complete the AZA Wildlife Contraception Center's annual Contraception Database
Survey, which is distributed in the spring by the Center's database manager.
* Monitor suppression via fecal gonadal hormones.

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