Crisis Zimbabwe Update: May 30, 2009

Emergency Translocation Update from Natasha Anderson: May 21 -

Transporting a rhino to safety

Transporting a rhino to safety

The translocation op is off to a good start. On day one we found the cow and calf that the poachers have been putting so much effort into chasing. We have better trackers (and a Squirrel helicopter), so we won and the two have been captured and released in safer environs.

Yesterday was even better – trackers found Jiros (Sinikwe’s brother). Once he was disturbed by the fixed wing he ran to Sinikwe, so then we knew where she was. Once Jiros was on the back of the truck, Raoul found Sinikwe again – waiting pretty much where she was when we darted Jiros. Sinikwe, disturbed by the circling fixed wing, also ran off looking for reassuring company and lead us straight to another young bull. So we moved all three.

Crisis Zimbabwe Update – May 26, 2009

bBack rhino cow called "Three "and her 12 month old calf

Our rhino monitors were tracking a black rhino cow called Three and her 12 month old calf.

On Sunday, May 10th, our rhino monitors were tracking a black rhino cow called Three and her 12 month old calf. Quietly moving through the bush, they noticed movement about 100 yards away – two armed poachers also tracking the same cow calf pair. They immediately radioed for National Parks and anti-poaching guard support, as our rhino monitors are not armed. Once linked up with armed guards, they moved in on the spoor trail again and found the poachers had actually lost the rhinos tracks and were now scouting in circles trying to relocate them. The follow-up team split – one to follow the poachers and the other to follow the rhinos. Less than a mile away the cow and calf had laid down for their midday nap. If the poachers had not lost their spoor, they would almost certainly have been killed. The rhinos’ tracks indicated that they had quietly gotten up from their rest and browsed while moving north. The poachers had continued circling to their south. Unfortunately the anti-poaching unit never caught up with the poachers, as tracking human spoor in long dry grass is a very difficult task.
 
Two days later, the same shoe patterns as seen on Sunday were located following three rhinos – this time a cow with a large calf and a bull. The bull was with the cow to mate and so there was a lot of movement with this group and little rest time to give poachers a chance to catch up. Fortunately again, the poachers did not get close enough to shoot these rhinos, but they remained in the same area and our concern was that the poachers would definitely search for these animals again over the weekend. Extra patrols were deployed in the hope that the poachers – seeing fresh footprints of anti-poaching scouts in the area – would think better of pursuing these animals again.
 
Sinikwe, our wounded black rhino cow, is now settling down after her shooting and monitors are able to get more than a fleeting glimpse of her. She has a new companion – a young bull with no ear-notches who is a previously unrecorded rhino to us. With any luck, these two will stay together and we will capture them both for translocating. Jiros, Sinikwe’s brother, is still in the area.
 
We have also had a new addition recorded. Angeline, a 15 year old black rhino cow had a new calf last month. With the calf so small, the mother is very protective and keeping to very thick bush so the monitors were not able to get any clear photos.


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Crisis Zimbabwe Update – May 21, 2009

update3photoJirosIt isn’t always bad news in the Lowveld – although way too many rhinos have been killed this year, a significant population still survives.  This is Jiros – Sinikwe’s younger brother. Since Sinikwe’s calf was killed by poachers (see update below from March 30th), we have found brother and sister together frequently and will be moving both to a more secure area, where we can better protect them from poachers, in our translocation operation.

Rhino Protection Unit Encounters Sumatran Rhino in BBS National Park

We Found the Sumatran Rhino!
By  Maman Suherman
Rhino Protection Unit, Bukit Barisan Selatan National Park
Sumatra, Indonesia

In the bright morning of Tuesday, March 10, 2009, we started again our routine activity as members of the Rhino Protection Unit (RPU), to preserve and protect the Sumatran Rhino in Bukit Barisan Selatan National Park (BBS).   My name is Maman, and I am a member of the RPU in BBS.   I wish in my prayers that the Sumatran rhino could increase their population and won’t become extinct.  I hope!!

We have already spent 3 days in the jungle, and so far we have not found the Sumatran rhino, but we did find signs, like foot prints.  I told my fellow RPU member, Zen Afrial, that the footprints still looked fresh – not more than a day old.  We found the fresh footprint near our flying camp, near the river.  I also found fresh feces, but it already was mixed with the water.  I believe that the feces are from the same rhino near our flying camp.  We tried to follow the tracks and we found another footprint of a Sumatran rhino.  Our team made a plaster cast to identify the footprint and also as documentation.  At the time, we decided to stay overnight near the river and not too far away from the footprint.  We made camp nearby, but not in the rhino tracks, and we tried make ourselves invisible. We don’t want disturb the rhino, we need to meet them.  All of the team feels the rhino is not too far away from us.      
 
On this survey, we were accompanied by several students from Bogor University; the BBS asked them to follow the RPU activity.  As long as they did not disturb us, for me it is fine.  At least I can share knowledge and discuss with them.  In the morning, before we had breakfast, Zen Afrial and I did an orientation around our camp for the students, and also checked the plaster cast footprint we made yesterday. 

After breakfast and after everything was done and packed, we continued the survey and routine activity.  We started to follow the rhino tracks we found yesterday.  Suddenly, my friend, Zen, said, “Stop!! Don’t move!!! Don’t speak!!”  All of us were very curious, wondering what happened, what is going on?  I dropped my backpack and plaster cast, and moved slowly close to Zen.  Zen said, “I saw the rhino.”  He pointed to a bush in front on me.  About 6 meters away, I saw something, black, big and moving.  Yes, it is a rhino – a Sumatran rhino, and it looked at me.  I saw the rhino was in good condition and had a pretty horn.  Almost like the horn of ‘Tam’, the Sumatran rhino in Sabah we saw on the internet.  I think it is a male rhino.  The rhino suddenly ran from us and stopped around 20 meters away, and it looked at us again.  (It looked like he wants to say good bye…).  Zen and I tried to follow the rhino, and even though we ran, it was impossible to find the rhino again.  He has gone, but it is ok, we have met him. Zen had a chance to take a picture although it is not too clear.   We went back to the point where we met the rhino, and explored.  We found a wallow and we think it is a permanent wallow for rhino. Still fresh!!   

Sumatran Rhino in the Wild Found by BBS RPU - A Very Rare Occurence!

Sumatran Rhino in the Wild Found by BBS RPU - A Very Rare Occurence! (photo by Zen Afrial)

We noted all data and information in our report and then we continued following the rhino tracks.  For almost half a day we explored this area and finally we concluded that this area is a home range for rhino and also other mammals because we found several footprints from other mammals. Zen, the head of my unit, Johan Marwan, the students, and I, are very lucky.   I was not sure I would see the rhino again.   Although it is not a first time that I met a rhino, it is the first time in 2009.   

BBS RPU Team and Students (photo by Zen Afrial)

BBS RPU Team and Students (photo by Zen Afrial)

Edited and translated by Sectionov.

In the Footsteps of a Rhino

My name is Remco van Merm. I studied Nature Conservation and Biodiversity Management in Deventer, the Netherlands. When I visited Ujung Kulon National Park in 2002, in the context of my holidays, I learned about the existence of Javan rhinos for the first time. During that visit, I encountered one rhino footprint, but at the time I did not realize how special that was. After coming home, I realized how lucky I had been to have seen even a mere footprint of this elusive animal, and I started to cultivate more and more interest in it. By now, this interest has developed into a passion, and I successfully completed both my BSc.-thesis and my MSc.-thesis on the subject of the Javan rhino.

After I graduated, my thesis started to live a life of its own, and it somehow found its way to Dr. Susie Ellis, Executive Director at IRF. I was taken completely unaware when she invited me to join on a field trip to Ujung Kulon, which was to take place in February 2009. I had little time to make the necessary arrangements, but luck stuck with me and I managed to get a cheap ticket and some time off, even though it was on very short notice. I was now ready for adventure, but it was still three weeks until my flight…

Time crept by slowly (as did my flight), but eventually I found myself emerging from the arrivals hall at Soekarno-Hatta international airport in Jakarta. A taxi took me to my hotel in Bogor, where I met Susie Ellis and Bibhab Talukdar, Chairman of the IUCN SSC Asian Rhino Specialist Group and IRF’s Asian Rhino Coodinator. The following morning we were joined by Sectionov (or Inov, IRF) and Widodo Ramono (Executive Director of YABI), and we started our journey to the Ujung Kulon National Park headquarters in Labuan, a trip which allegedly took only three hours, but which seemed a lot longer.

At the NP HQ, we were welcomed by Agus Priambudi, the Director of Ujung Kulon NP, as well as other National Park staff members. A delicious lunch replenished our resources, after which we continued our journey to Sumur, accompanied by Agus Priambudi. I was shocked to see the state of the road, which less than a year earlier was still in good shape, but which was now littered with holes as a result of heavy trucks carrying big pieces of rock to a construction site near Pandeglang.

From Sumur we took the “Badak Laut” (“Sea Rhino”, a speed boat used for patrols by the National Park) to Handeuleum Island, where we would be spending the night in the recently renovated resort. Since it was the season of strong westerly winds, the sea was rather choppy and the ride was rough, as though we had never left the hole-infested road to Sumur. After about an hour, the boat made an attempt to moor at an island. A huge flying fox was circling the treetops of the island’s coastline. Initially, there was some confusion about what we were going to do here, but it soon became evident that this was our destination.

Having been in Ujung Kulon a year earlier, the magic of the place was still fresh in me. Seeing the forested coastline of the peninsula only a couple hundred metres away made that thrill surge through me again. It felt more like a homecoming than coming home ever had.  We were welcomed on the dock by a number of RPU (Rhino Protection Unit) members and National Park rangers, as well as Iwan Podol, the camera trapping expert of WWF-Ujung Kulon.

We unloaded our bags from the boat and set foot to the resort, passing a narrow strip of beach forest before emerging on an open field where the recently renovated resort beckoned us to take a rest. A dinner of fried fish and vegetables was waiting for us, and as it turned out, the RPU members were great cooks. Later that evening the wildlife of Handeuleum Island also came to give us a warm welcome, when a number of deer emerged from the forest to graze in front of our porch. A couple of flying foxes were moving in the trees to the left of us, but when I pointed my flashlight in that direction, the ghostly eyes of something much larger were looking back at me. Unable to decide what it was, I went to bed for some well-earned rest.

The following morning, we got up early. We were expected at the RPU post in Tamanjaya at eight o’clock in the morning, where we would get a short tour of the facility and some explanation about the organizational structure of the RPU. Waiting for us in Tamanjaya was Kerry Crosbie (Asian Rhino Project director), who had arrived in Indonesia the day before and travelled to Tamanjaya overland.

We spent half an hour there before we continued our journey to Legon Pakis, an enclave in the National Park. Legon Pakis was the scene of a major conflict a couple of years before, in which a villager lost his life and a newly built guard post was burned to the ground. Fortunately the conflict was resolved and the relationship between the villagers and the National Park guards improved again.

From Legon Pakis, our guides took us through the rice fields in the direction of the forest on the lower slopes of Mount Honje. The forest edge wasn’t far, but the layout of the rice fields forced us to take a zigzagging route over the low mud buttresses in between them. The beauty of the landscape could hardly be enjoyed, because the path we followed was very narrow and slippery, requiring our full attention. During our hike through the fields we were escorted by the eerie sound of scarecrows, which scraped a piece of metal on the inside of a rusty can whenever they were stirred by the slightest breeze. In the distance, the angry noise of a chainsaw disturbed the peace. A couple of RPU members left our group to investigate, but luckily the chainsaw was being used on the outside of the National Park.
Then the heavens opened their floodgates, and all sounds were muffled by the deafening roar of the rain. It was brief but torrential, and in no time at all we were soaked. By the time we reached the forest edge we looked like drowned kittens. The path was saturated with water, causing us to sink to our ankles in the sticky mud. In the process of wiggling free of the mud’s relentless grip, Kerry lost the sole of her shoe, which, by the way, was not even her shoe. After having a good laugh and exchanging her shoes with Inov, she gave the OK and we continued our soggy hike. Along the way, Pak Widodo pointed out the many signs of good rhino habitat, including the high availability of water and cover, as well as a wide variety of rhino food plants.

Photo 3 Remco blog

Eventually we reached a wider part of the path, where the RPU members had prepared a resting area for us. There was a makeshift bench of branches and rattan leaves, and a pot of coffee was boiling over a small campfire. The bench was a welcome opportunity to sit down without becoming too wet, and the coffee made us alert again. Iwan Podol took the opportunity to talk about the 30 newly placed video traps, the cameras for which had been supplied by IRF. He explained how the cameras were distributed over the western part of the peninsula, based on signs of rhino activity. After a month of operation, 14 video clips of rhinos had been collected so far, some of which have been posted on the IRF website. The cameras will stay in their current location for a year, after which they will be moved to the eastern part of the peninsula, where they will also remain for a year. Hopefully, the results of these traps will help us to learn more about the behaviour of Javan rhinos. That information will be very important to identify suitable locations where a new population of Javan rhinos can be established.

Eventually our hike took us back to Legon Pakis, where we had lunch before going to Tanjung Lame. From Tanjung Lame, we took a boat to the isthmus. Shallow waters near the shore forced us to leave the boat and wade through the sea for a hundred metres or so. Given that I was wearing sandals instead of hiking shoes, I made use of the occasion to rinse the mud from my feet with the refreshing seawater.

On the beach where we landed, we immediately saw some exciting signs of wildlife in the shape of leopard footprints. A little further inland we came across a stand of Arenga obtusifolia, a notorious palm that is spreading fast across the Ujung Kulon peninsula, outcompeting rhino foodplants. Where Arenga grows in stands, their foliage blocks all sunlight, hampering the growth of other plants. However, Javan rhino does not only suffer from Arenga stands. There is evidence that they use them for cover, and to wallow in the mud cooled by the Arenga’s shade.

Photo 5 Remco blog

It wasn’t long before we saw the first signs of a rhino. The calf-high water on our path obscured any rhino footprints, but it made its dung float. The expert nose of Pak Uus told us that the dung was approximately two weeks old. A little further along our path we did come across some footprints, which were also more than a week old.

photo 6 remco blog

Our path took us further across the isthmus to the southern coast, where we would take a rest at the guard post of Karangranjang. I remembered this particular guard post very well. This was where I spent my first night when I came to Ujung Kulon in 2002. I remembered a soursop tree outside the broken window of the bedroom. It was still there, and to my surprise, it had hardly grown. The area around the guard post was remarkably similar to seven years earlier, suggesting that it was still regularly being used.

After some coffee and a cup of POP mie, we continued our trek to a rhino wallow not far from the guard post. When we arrived there, there were plenty of signs of rhino activity, indicating that the wallow was still active. We spent a long time here, allowing the RPU to take measurements of the footprints. Being where a rhino had passed perhaps a week earlier was very exciting. I tried to imagine the rhino that had made the track, visualizing it as it plodded past the wallow. It must have been a large rhino, leaving footprints of approximately 28 centimetres and mud on the lower 1.5 metres of tree trunks. On the left side of the wallow the mud had been churned as though the rhino had been dancing. Being at a place like this, seeing evidence of the struggle of the extremely rare Javan rhino to hold on to existence, must be an emotional moment for any conservationist.
We went back to the north shore of the isthmus, tired and dirty, but very satisfied. A refreshing bath beckoned us at the resort, after which a delicious grilled fish dinner gave us even more satisfaction. When the sun started to set, I took out my flashlight to investigate the tree from where the previous evening something had been staring at me with wraithlike glowing eyes. Pointing my flashlight in its direction, I could see that there were a number of flying foxes roosting in its upper branches. But on some lower branches, a large, dark shape grabbed my attention. It was difficult to make out what it was, because the dark background of leaves obscured its silhouette. But as they say, patience is a virtue, and after a while the dark shaped moved from one branch to another, crossing a patch of sky, where the fading light outlined the shape of a large, four-limbed animal with a long, bushy tail. Susie exclaimed that it might be a binturong (otherwise known as bearcat), and I was glad that she did, because I was hoping that it would indeed be a binturong. However, not all of us agreed, and there followed a long debate on the nature of the mysterious creature in the tree. Some suggested that it was just a bat (being unaware of the bushy tail), while I tried not to maintain that it was a binturong too stubbornly. I gave some consideration to the possibility that it was a flying lemur, but I hadn’t seen any skin flaps between its fore and hind limbs. The debate unresolved, I went to bed, and even though it might not have been a binturong, I settled with the idea that it might – it just might – have been one.

I woke in the middle of the night to the sound of hammering rain. It poured out of the sky unrelenting, hammering on the roof over my head with rare brutality. It went on for the rest of the night and well into the following morning. Therefore, our schedule to go canoeing had to be adjusted, and we decided to have a meeting with the RPU members first, which was originally planned for that evening. The RPU members were very happy to talk about their motivation to do their job, and they all obviously did it with pleasure and pride. After having been in the jungle the day before, experiencing its hot, soggy dampness, I got a deep respect for these people. They spend at least twenty days every month in the forest, with disregard to the weather conditions. And while the experience was thrilling to me, I couldn’t help but be amazed at the enthusiasm of the RPU members.

Eventually, the rain ceased in time for us to go on our scheduled canoe trip. We took the Badak Laut to the mouth of the Cigenter river, where we got into our canoes. The scenery on the river was absolutely stunning, and it became more and more beautiful after every bend. There were a lot of overhanging branches, and the high water level sometimes made it difficult for us to pass them, to the point where we had to lay flat in our canoes if we didn’t want to be knocked off. Along the way, we came across a number of young pythons, which were lying in ambush on the branches of young trees and on palm leaves.

Since the water level was high and the overhanging branches were low, sooner or later we would reach a point where we could no longer continue by canoe. Living in the illusion that our destination – Cigenter Falls – was only 700 metres away, we continued on foot. At first, the path was slippery, but reasonably easy to walk. However, this soon took a drastic change. The path became more and more slippery, as did my mud-clogged sandals, making it almost impossible to stay upright. At the first crossing of a stream, my sandals betrayed me and I lost my footing. Iwan Podol grabbed my wrist to prevent me from falling all the way into the river, but my shoulder felt like it was nearly dislodged in the process. I finally made it safely to the other side and continued the hike. We crossed a number of other streams, one of which had particularly treacherous banks. Pak Agus decided that the safest way to cross this stream was through the air, and after several tries, a sturdy liana swayed him safely to the other side.

The path became narrower and ever more slippery. It became almost to narrow to walk on, which added an extra thrill to the trip. Only an arm’s length away, the river bank made a sheer drop to the water some two metres below, and on the other side of the path, the land sloped steeply up. If not for the support of the available vegetation, I would surely have tumbled into the river. This was the last place where I expected to find rhino footprints (except for my backyard, obviously), but to my astonishment, there was a clear rhino track on the very same path. I could not imagine how an animal of 2000 kilograms could follow a path that was hardly wide enough for a human. We followed the footsteps of this acrobatic rhino in the opposite direction and eventually we came to the point where the rhino had climbed out of the river onto the steep, muddy bank, proving that the plump Javan rhino is actually very agile. A truly amazing animal.

At last, after a hike of several 700 metres, we heard the sweet sound of a rumbling waterfall. We had arrived at our destination. Most of the group stayed at the bottom of the waterfall, but I made my way upstream, climbing over rocks and fallen logs. Iwan and a couple of RPU members were already on the other side, where an opening in the undergrowth indicated where a campsite had been. We spent some time here to take a rest and enjoy the riverscape. My imagination took me on another journey as I pictured a rhino crossing the river bend. Just the possibility that it might happen before my own eyes was an adrenalin rush for me. Such is the enchantment of Ujung Kulon: the secrecy of its rare animals is so tantalizing that it feels like a presence lurking in the shady undergrowth.

The way to Cigenter Falls was quite an adventure, but the way back to Handeuleum Island was even more so. My sandals had collected a respectable amount of mud, making it almost impossible for me to keep my footing. When we came to the stream with the treacherously steep banks, I decided that I might be safer if I tried to cross on a makeshift bridge (which was no more than a thick bamboo trunk). I was wrong. As I tried to get down to the ‘bridge’, I slipped. I was holding a rattan leaf for my balance, but it bent more than I wanted, and a fall into the stream seemed inevitable. I was already preparing myself to go under, but suddenly, my fall was broken by the rattan leaf that I was holding. As I was dangling from the steep bank, with the water of the stream to my thighs, I had a moment of indecision. Would I let go and sacrifice my camera, or would I try to climb back up and risk another fall? I was hanging with my back to the muddy bank, holding only a rattan leaf. Could I trust its strength to get me back up? I could not feel the streambed under my feet; if I let go, I might get wetter than I’d expect. Finally, I struggled to turn around and I used the rattan leaf and some roots that were sticking out of the bank to scramble back up it. There was Iwan again to hoist me back up, and I managed to get back to safety. Without further ado, I took off my sandals and tried again to cross the ‘bridge’. This time, I made it to the other side safely, with many thanks to the RPU members who were there for extra support.

Eventually we all made it back to the canoes, and we let the river take us back to the beach. Along the way, I heard a rustling noise on the right bank. I tried to see through the dense vegetation, but I could not make out anything. Then, a small gap in the foliage gave me a glimpse of a large, dark shape. And then it was gone. In my enthusiasm and frantic desire to see a rhino, I saw a rhino.

I yelled “Rhinorhinorhino!”, causing a lot of confusion among my friends. But I was convinced that I had seen the shoulder and ears of a rhino sticking out above the undergrowth. We paddled our way back to the place where I had sounded the alarm, and I scuttled onto the river bank with Inov right behind me. Expecting that any rhino that might have been there would have been startled by my foolish call, I was not too disappointed to find that the shape I had seen was only a dry palm leaf. There were, however, some rhino footprints, but according to the RPU member who joined us, they were already more than a week old. Further downstream, we came across a narrow gap in the vegetation, where a rhino had climbed out of the river and disappeared in the undergrowth.

Back at the beach we made a little detour to the Cigenter grazing ground, where we were treated with a herd of banteng grazing on the far side. Then, the Badak Laut took us back to Handeuleum Island.

It was a warm evening, which was not only due to the high temperature. There was the warmth of friendship and, for some, whiskey. We all had a good laugh about my hallucination, and we talked about the tough treks that we had made in the past two days. It had been a wonderful experience for all of us. Despite the harsh conditions of the rainy season, Ujung Kulon had showed me once again where my heart lies. I postponed sleep as long as exhaustion allowed me, savouring every moment. When fatigue finally got the better of me, I went to bed. The following morning the Badak Laut took us back to Sumur. As the forested coastline of the peninsula disappeared into the distance, I was filled with many different emotions. There was sadness for having to leave, satisfaction with what I had experienced, and regret that I hadn’t seen a Javan rhino. But underneath it all, simmering, was the belief that I would get another chance; I would return to Ujung Kulon, to walk once more in the footsteps of a rhino.

Crisis Zimbabwe Update – May 18, 2009

Weekend Update from Natasha Anderson:

Looks like we all made it through. No poachers spoor located and no shots reported.
 
Today is final preparation day for the upcoming emergency translocations. Dr. Chris Foggin is arriving with his son Greg to set up all the veterinary kit. Lovemore Mungwashu is driving the Merc translocation truck down from Harare. Raoul and Dr. Mark Davies will fly in this afternoon (the Husky made it through all it’s tests!!). Jackson Kamwi – our senior rhino monitor – is coming across from Save Valley. Jackson has probably tracked more rhinos for translocation than any other person anywhere and his experience and skill is invaluable. Glenton Combes will be here with the Squirrel helicopter Tuesday morning early.
 
The rhino monitors will be locating the priority rhinos today so they have the best idea where to pick up on them tomorrow morning when the translocation team is set.
 
Here we go!

Example of a past rhino translocation

Example of a past rhino translocation

Crisis Zimbabwe Update – May 18, 2009

From The Herald, 18 May 2009 

3 poachers shot dead

By George Maponga in Masvingo

Three suspected poachers, who were part of a five-man gang allegedly intending to kill rhinos at Malilangwe Trust Conservancy in Chiredzi, were last weekend shot dead by a joint team of police and game rangers following a prolonged exchange of gunfire.

After the shootout, inside the conservancy, one of the five suspects escaped while the other one was apprehended while holed up in their getaway Toyota Hilux parked along the Chiredzi-Tanganda highway.

Read the full article.

Hard, slippery hiking in the rain and mud

By Sectionov
IRF Indonesia Liaison, Bogor, Indonesia

Ujung Kulon
In the end of February 2009, IRF Executive Director Dr. Susie Ellis (or in Indonesia we call her Ibu Susie) and several rhino experts, Dr. Bibhab Talukdar – IRF Asian Rhino Coordinator, Kerry Crosbie – Director of the Asian Rhino Project, Remco van Merm – Netherlands, Pak Widodo Ramono (Executive Director of YABI Indonesia) and Pak Agus Priambudi (Head of Ujung Kulon National Park) were accompanied by the Ujung Kulon Rhino Protection Units, to visit Ujung Kulon NP. Actually, it is not a good time to visit Ujung Kulon because it is the rainy, wet season as well as northwest monsoon session in which there are sometimes very bad storms.  

Pak Uus, Bibhab, Ibu Susie, Remco, Kerry and Pak Agus taking a coffee break in the forest

Pak Uus, Bibhab, Ibu Susie, Remco, Kerry and Pak Agus taking a coffee break in the forest

Ujung Kulon National Park was designated a World Heritage Site by UNESCO under the decree No: SC/Eco/5867.2.409, after considering the highly unique conservation area as the habitat of the last remaining population of the Javan rhino (Rhinoceros sondaicus).  The Javan rhino is possibly the world’s rarest large. No more than 50 Javan rhinos live in Ujung Kulon National Park. For the last 15 years, the population has not grown.

Ujung Kulon National Park is located in the south-western corner of the island of Java, Indonesia. It covers an area of about 300 km², including the entire Ujung Kulon peninsula, the islands of Peucang, Handeleum and Panaitan and part of the mainland, including Mount Honje – its eastern slopes define the border of the Park.
Ujung Kulon National Park lies within the administrative Province of Banten and the District of Pandeglang. The point-to-point ocean boundary encloses Ujung Kulon Peninsula and the offshore islands of Pulau Handeleum and Pulau Peucang, whilst the island of Pulau Panaitan is separated by the 10 km-wide Panaitan Straits. The eastern boundary follows contours along the eastern foothills of the Gunung Honje massif. Ujung Kulon National Park comprises 120,551 hectares (ha) (terrestrial 76,214 ha; marine 44,337 ha). 
Vegetation has been subject to a number of anthropogenic and natural modifications, of which the most notable is the 1883 Krakatau eruption. As a result, primary lowland rain forest, the natural vegetation cover, now occupies only 50% of the total area, being largely confined to the Gunung Payung and Honje massifs.

Hard, slippery hiking in the rain and mud

We started trekking from the Rhino Protection Unit (RPU) camp in Taman Jaya.  We had a plan to hike in the park to look for rhinos and also to inspect the area in which we propose to build a Javan Rhino Sanctuary (JRS).  After visiting Ujung Kulon, there was a meeting of the IUCN/SSC Asian Rhino Specialist Group (AsRSG) in Bogor and one of topics is the possibility to build JRS in Ujung Kulon, with the eventual aim to translocate a group of rhinos to establish a second population.  Accompanied by the RPUs, we started trekking in the rain.          

Ibu Susie with the RPUs

Ibu Susie with the RPUs

One of the highlights of this trip was spending time with the RPUs.  These uniformed men are the front lines of rhino conservation, believing so strongly in the preservation of the rhino that they put their lives on the line to provide rhinos the protection necessary to eradicate poaching. The RPU consists of 4 people in each group that patrol 15 days in a month; the other 10 days is allocated for reporting and rest.  Each group is comprised of a unit header that is a forest guard and three members from the local community.  These members are recruited through special selection and training. IRF, in collaboration with YABI, recently hired an additional RPU in Ujung Kulon NP.  RPU is a unique collaboration, which combining government officer and the community in professionally securing and patrolling the national park area and ensuring good management. 

Even though, in fact, the RPU has the task of securing the rhinoceros’ habitat, because the rhino has a vast home range, other species are also protected.  The RPUs have had many findings and cases such as apprehension of illegal hunters and illegal loggers.  
Although this is not a first time for our group to visit Ujung Kulon NP, this trip was a hard one because of the wet and slippery hiking in the rain and mud.   Conditions of Ujung Kulon NP are tropical maritime, with a seasonal mean annual rainfall of approximately 3,249 mm.  Salute to Ibu Susie and Ibu Kerry from the Asian Rhino Project – they are really tough during the trip, in the mud and hard rain.  This trip gave a new spirit and support to the RPUs and was especially important to the new members of the Ujung Kulon RPUs. They were really a proud and happy because of the attention and support from donors (IRF, ARP and YABI) as well as the fact that the leaders of these organizations trekked together with them Ujung Kulon’s deep forests.    

RPUs and Ibu Susie crossing river, UKNP, Indonesia

RPUs and Ibu Susie crossing river, UKNP, Indonesia

During our trek with the RPUs, we found several signs of Javan rhino such as foot prints, wallows and another sign (feeding and rub marks of Javan rhino horn).  Together with the RPUs, we identified and discussed the possibility of building a temporary holding area for Javan rhinos.  We also visited the isthmus area, which Dr. Nico van Strien suggested 4 years ago.  This was a good trip that gave us the chance to assess the condition of the Park.     
We are very appreciative and thankful to Ibu Susie as IRF Executive Director and also the RPUs call her “our mother”.   And as Ibu Susie said, “Hard, slippery hiking in the rain and mud. I’ve never been so tired or dirty in my life. But we had a great time!”

Crisis Zimbabwe Update – May 14, 2009

Searching Tandeka’s sub-adult calf’s carcass for ballistics evidence

Sylvester Ncube (Bubye Valley Conservancy Security Sergeant) and Israel Ngarira (Senior Rhino Monitor) searched through the carcass of Tandeka’s calf to locate bullet heads. Three were found in this carcass. This evidence helps us build a case against the poachers and provides clues to the poachers’ identities – the bullet heads found in this rhino were not AK-47 rounds as has been the case in most other recent poaching.

update2photo

Crisis Zimbabwe Update – May 12, 2009

Some good news….. The black rhino called Juliet who was shot by poachers on March 30th (see update below from April 14) is looking strong and is likely to recover without need for veterinary intervention. Understandably she is still highly sensitive to any disturbance and has given the rhino monitors a few very close calls when they have tried to approach her to check on the bullet injury. Juliet is still returning to her calf’s carcass – as is Sinikwe who was also shot when poachers killed her calf.  Fortunately, in the area where Juliet lives, we have found no sign of the poachers returning (as has been the case in the area where Sinikwe lives). The fact that scouts found and shot at the poachers when they were trying to locate Juliet to finish her off on the 31st of March is no doubt a factor in this.
 

From left to right, Tandeka with her current calf, Cruiser, and Juliet.

From left to right, Tandeka with her current calf, Cruiser, and Juliet.

Sadly, we found two other rhino carcasses nearby Juliet’s calf carcass – a bull and a three year old sub-adult female. The female was the calf of one of Juliet’s grown up calves – Tandeka. Having confirmed four dead rhinos in the area, a search was conducted for the other resident rhinos. Scouting failed to locate any rhino spoor but no carcasses were found either, so the search was extended to a larger area. Eventually our trackers found spoor 10 km to the east of the rhinos’ normal range. It appears the entire sub-population – mostly Juliet’s now adult female calves and their calves – has moved en-mass. We have seen this before in other areas when heavy poaching losses have been sustained. Though we cannot be certain, it seems that when certain rhinos are killed (or, in this case, seriously distressed as Juliet probably is with the loss of her calf), the anchor of a social grouping of rhinos can be broken and they will move to new areas.