Almo Nature Blog

Farmers&Predators: the Iberian Lynx, from Andujar to Coto Doñana

Written by Almo Nature | Jul 29, 2018 10:00:00 PM

Respected naturalists and wildlife photographers Angelo Gandolfi and Elisabeth van Lersel, embarked on a journey through southern France, Spain and Portugal discovering large predators, such as wolves, and look at their impact on the environment and the human communities sharing the same ecosystems. Here's what they write in part four of their diary extract. 

 

An Almo Nature Farmers&Predators-aligned project

A not entirely “natural" habitat

We found it disturbing that  Iberian Lynx conservation was not being carried out in the vast natural areas that still exist in Spain ( we talked about this previously), but instead in an area where, whatever route you take whether on foot or by car,  you will always find yourself surrounded by unpassable high fences bearing a sign saying: “ coto privado de caza" (private hunting ground).There is also the  Virgen de la Cabeza sanctuary high up on a hill in the middle of an area densely populated by Lynx. Seen on the map, you would think Virgen de la Cabeza looks like a small, old rural chapel, when in fact it is more like an oversized tower, that during major events hosts more than  300.000 devotees. That's right, you read it correctly,  within a few hectares you can see a crowd the size of an entire city gathering. The Virgen de la Cabeza's sanctuary overlooking the Lynx's territory in Andujar In search of some fresh air, we decide to take a trip to a place not far from the sanctuary that we know quite well, the  Sierra de Cazorla y Segura comprising  200,000 hectares of woods, mountains and springs.Here we meet a wildlife tour guide; he tells us that he expects to see wolf in these parts before too long because there have been sightings in Cuenca, an area east of Madrid with extensive forests. We were surprised to hear this fact, since the species seemed to be heading west.Some people argue that in the Sierra Morena, between  dehesas and the hunting reserves,  a small pack of wolves still survives, although on the verge of extinction…The website  andalucia.com claims that  there are no wolves in the region anymore. However, in 2016 the  Life Southern Wolves programme – a species recovery program – was launched, with substantial funding from the EU.On the web, we only find mention of the initial phase of the project but no recent news so we requested information via e-mail, receiving a brief answer that they are still trying to educate and convince people… but  we don't have any data about the status of the species.

Lynx conversation efforts

The population of the wolf can be restored with the arrival of new specimens from the North, however  about ten years ago people noticed there weren't any Iberian Lynx left, apart from two small groups in Andalusia, one in the Sierra Morena and one at the  Coto Doñana National Park. No one was doing any fieldwork, people thought there were lynx in Estremadura, Portugal and elsewhere, but they were actually extinct in those regions.Luckily, the  protection and repopulation program, though late, did succeed. From fewer than a hundred specimens, over 500 lynx now live in the region: 200 in  Andujar, around  80 in the east (at Carolina and Despeñaperros), a further  80 in the Coto Doñana, as well as some groups scattered across the mountains of Toledo, in Southern Portugal and in Estremadura.Overall, reintroducing the lynx was a pretty complex operation despite the fact the wild cat doesn't face as many  enemies and prejudices as the wolf  does.
The heart of project is located in the historic  Coto Doñana  park, which is probably  Europe's most beleaguered national park. Its popular coastal marshes are often drained because  the water of the Guadalquivir river is used upstream to irrigate fields of strawberries, tomatoes and other fruits.

Man and the balance of nature: preservers and destroyers

In the heart of the park is the popular beach resort of  Matalascañas, which Wikipedia estimates has just 800 inhabitants. But in the summer, tens of thousands of people visit resulting in  lanes of cars driving at insane speeds, meaning the local lynx are in real jeopardy.This situation necessitates the use of  fences and construction of over/underpasses, that are highly expensive and hard to upkeep.
Another cause of mortality for the lynx is the  scarcity of prey: in particular, due to the colonies of rabbits that have died due to myxomatosis. At the Doñana park there are now  breeding areas for rabbits, with  fences that only a lynx can climb over to hunt them, thus avoiding competition with foxes and other minor predators.The protection program is mostly aimed at  educating and convincing farmers, park rangers and hunters while the repopulation program involves breeding the lynx in captivity, then reintroducing them into the wild in areas including Portugal, Estremadura, Toledo's mountains and  Cabaneros National Park.The overall feeling of naturalists towards this program is similar to our reaction to the hunting reserves in Andujar, that is it looks like  a desperate, and very artificial conservation attempt.But we recently heard some heart-warming news:  it looks like the lynx aren't staying within the protected fences, but are also expanding northwards.We will talk about this more in next week's instalment. This travel journal is part of a wider project by Almo Nature/Fondazione Capellino, called Farmers&Predators, whose aim is to favour and harmonise the cohabitation between farmers and wildlife. Learn more by clicking hereTo read from the first episode of this series,  click here