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FLORA AND FAUNA
Catching some zzzz's at Costa Rica's sloth sanctuary
by Staff Writers
Penshurt, Costa Rica (AFP) Sept 11, 2012


They often arrive in bad shape -- hit by cars, zapped by high-voltage wires as they climb trees, or orphaned because superstitious locals have killed their moms.

But life gets sweet once the gates open at Costa Rica's sloth sanctuary, one of few in the world specializing in the study of these famously sedentary and solitary mammals.

The youngest even get stuffed animals to hug in incubators. All together now: awwwwww.

Their digs are indeed nice: 130 hectares (300 acres) of lush tropical forest with a crystal-clear river flowing through it in Penshurt, 215 kilometers (130 miles) from the capital San Jose near Costa Rica's east coast.

The Costa Rica Sloth Sanctuary -- a four-meter (13-foot) cement replica of one of the critters greets visitors at the entrance -- was founded in 1992 by a Costa Rican named Luis Arroyo and his US wife, Judy Avey.

The idea is to protect, nurse and study the animals, but also to teach people about them.

Locals call them "osos perezosos", or lazy bears, and some even associate them with witchcraft. They are an enigma of sorts. Why don't they move, run or jump, like other self-respecting mammals do?

"It hurts me that people do not appreciate them. They are not lazy, but rather simply slow. We can learn from their calm, to maintain serenity, as they do," said Avey.

The refuge -- originally supposed to be for birds in an area that is home to some 350 species -- receives two kinds of sloth, two-toed and three-toed, both of which exist in Costa Rica.

Teresa Gonzalez, an employee at the sanctuary, says she has been feeding the animals for five years and knows their every quirk.

"One does not like carrots, but rather green peas. That one will let me bathe with him," said Gonzalez as she held a baby sloth named Mojo, sucking away at a bottle of goat's milk.

Look around and some sloths are perched in trees, others rest in baskets and young ones in incubators clutch stuffed animals as if they were their mothers.

The ones brought in as babies stay for good, because they do not know how to live in their native habitat. But injured adults are returned to the wild when they have recovered.

-- 'To know them is to love them' --

Avey points to her first resident -- a specimen named Buttercup, snoozing in a hanging rattan chair. She was brought to the refuge after her mother was hit by a car and died.

"Neither the zoos nor anyone else wanted her because they did not know anything about sloths. But we fell in love with her. She climbed into my arms and stayed there. She is my spoiled one," said Avey.

Since its founding the center has taken care of more than 500 of the animals. It costs about 400 dollars (315 euros) per head each year.

The sanctuary raises revenue with a small zoo, a hotel and guided tours of this most relaxed of biological reserves.

"We saw some on YouTube and decided to come and see them up close. We love them," said Briggs Lebeacq, a young American tourist who came to Costa Rica with his girlfriend.

What is the life of a sloth like?

Vets say they eat only leaves, do not drink water and in Costa Rica tend to live on the Caribbean coast to the east because of the humidity and abundant presence of the guarumo, or trumpet tree, the animal's favorite.

Sanctuary veterinarian Marcelo Espinosa said their metabolism is so slow it takes them a month to digest food. They eat twice a day and only come down out of the trees once a week to defecate. They sleep 18 hours a day and eat little, as they do not burn a lot of energy.

As for sex, little is know about the two-toed variety.

But three-toed females, in heat, scream out for males to find them. What ensues could certainly test non-sloth romance: the male can take three days just to get there.

Espinosa said not a lot of research is done on sloths because he said no one cares.

But Avey, who has lived in Costa Rica for 40 years, certainly does.

"I cannot imagine life without them," she said. "To know them is to love them."

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Plea to save world's 100 most threatened species
Seoul (AFP) Sept 11, 2012 - Conservation experts released a list Tuesday of the world's 100 most threatened species and warned that only a changed public and government mindset could save them from imminent extinction.

The list compiled by the Zoological Society of London (ZSL) in a report titled "Priceless or Worthless?" comprised 100 animals, plants and fungi deemed first in line for extinction.

"All the species listed are unique and irreplaceable. If they vanish, no amount of money can bring them back," said the report's co-author, Ellen Butcher.

"If we take immediate action we can give them a fighting chance for survival. But this requires society to support the moral and ethical position that all species have an inherent right to exist," Butcher said.

The ZSL report was released in Jeju Island in South Korea where some 8,000 government officials, NGOs, scientists and business chiefs from 170 nations are gathered for the World Conservation Congress.

Conservationists fear those species included in the list, like the Tarzan's Chameleon from Madagascar and the Pigmy Three-toed Sloth from Panama, will be allowed to die out because they provide humans with no obvious benefits.

While monetising nature remains a worthwhile necessity for conservationists, the wider value of species on the brink of extinction should not be disregarded, the ZSL report said.

"The whole world has become more utilitarian and looking for what nature can do for us," ZSL's director of conservation, Jonathan Baillie, told AFP by telephone.

"Governments have to step up to the plate and declare whether these species are priceless or worthless; whether we have a right to drive them to extinction," Baillie said.

"If we can't save the 100 most threatened, what hope is there for the rest of life on the planet?" he added.

The Jeju congress, held by the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN), is taking place against a drumbeat of scientific warnings that a mass extinction looms.

In a report issued at the Rio+20 world summit in June, the IUCN said that out of 63,837 species it had assessed, 19,817 run the risk of extinction due to depleted habitat, hunting and climate change.

At threat are 41 percent of amphibian species, 33 percent of reef-building corals, 25 percent of mammals, 20 percent of plants and 13 percent of birds, the update of the prestigious "Red List" said.

Many are essential for humans, providing food and work and a gene pool for better crops and new medicines, it said.

Experts say that only a fraction of Earth's millions of species, many of them microscopic, have been formally identified.

In recent years, biologists have found new species of frogs and birds in tropical forests -- proof that the planet's full biodiversity is only partly known.

UN members pledged under the Millennium Development Goals to brake the rate of loss in species by 2010, but fell badly short of the mark.

After this failure, they set a "strategic plan for biodiversity" under which they vowed to prevent the extinction of "most known species".



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FLORA AND FAUNA
Threat to wildlife haven in 'scariest place on Earth'
Jeju, South Korea (AFP) Sept 9, 2012
An unlikely and unique cradle of biodiversity that runs the length of the world's most heavily-militarised border is being threatened by encroaching development, conservation experts say. Once described by former US president Bill Clinton as "the scariest place on Earth", the Demilitarised Zone (DMZ) that divides the Korean peninsula between North and South was created after the 1950-1953 Ko ... read more


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