Saturday, December 20, 2014

Lisbon Zoo will have two Iberian lynx

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The Lisbon Zoo has two new residents: a couple of Iberian lynx. The animals recently arrived at the zoo as part of a project for the conservation of species developed in partnership with the Institute for nature conservation and forestry.

Azhar, the female, is the founder of the National Center of reproduction of the Iberian lynx (CNRLI). The male, gamma, was born in 2010 in Central Reproduction de La Olivilla, in Spain, having moved in November to CNRLI. The two animals are now ambassadors from Lisbon zoo species and begin an important educational mission among the visitors.

On its website, the zoo of Lisbon explains that the arrival of the couple of animals causes the institution to have "a strategic role in the conservation plan for the species, while an essential tool of dissemination and awareness-raising among the population".

"This project takes pride in a lot and reinforces our mission: to preserve and conserve endangered species. The Iberian lynx is even more important because it is a species endemic to the Iberian Peninsula, having regard to the serious risk of extinction that faces ", indicates the President of the Lisbon Zoo, Francisco Naharro Pires.

The Iberian lynx is native and endemic to the Iberian Peninsula and is classified as critically endangered by the International Union for conservation of Nature. The survival of the species is still at risk, finding themselves in a situation of pré-extinção. It is estimated that the current number of these animals is less than 350.

Foto: manuelpenatorner/Creative Commons

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