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living on the wild side

 

This article is from thestar.com.my

URL:

http://thestar.com.my/lifestyle/story.asp?file=/2002/5/21/features/tiger1 & sec=fe\

atures

 

________________________

 

 

Tuesday, May 21, 2002

Living on the wild side

Stories and pictures by MENG YEW CHOONG

 

AT FIRST glance, there is nothing unusual about the Felda Jerangau Barat (FJB)

scheme in central Terengganu. A pretty good road leads visitors to the 2,400ha

oil palm estate that straddles Hulu Terengganu and Dungun.

 

 

 

Set up in 1972, FJB was one of the many land development schemes initiated by

the Federal Government through the Federal Land Development Agency (Felda). As

its name suggests, Felda is tasked with opening up land for plantations to

uplift the living standard of the poor and landless in the country.

 

However, Jerangau is no ordinary Felda scheme: it is frequently visited by

tigers (Panthera tigris) from the nearby forest reserve which is rich in

wildlife. In fact, Jerangau can easily qualify as the Felda scheme with the most

tiger sightings in the country. Over the years there have been numerous reports

of livestock being killed by tigers that wandered into human settlements. The

first recorded case was as early as the 1950s.

 

FJB is home to 363 families, some of whom rear cattle to supplement their

income. The cattle are left to roam free. Livestock that is left wandering

around after dusk is easy prey for tigers due to the settlement’s proximity to

the forest reserve.

 

FJB is surrounded by the Jerangau Forest Reserve which was logged in the early

1970s; the reserve is currently undergoing another round of logging. More

significantly, FJB is less than 30km away from the National Park which is a

sanctuary for carnivores, both large and small.

 

Studies by the World Wide Fund for Nature (WWF) Malaysia show that a few tigers

do live in Jerangau, while a good number pass through the area from time to

time.

 

Farmers often do not report cattle lost to tigers. There is little incentive to

do so since they do not receive any compensation. But the villagers do not take

kindly to such losses. An adult animal can easily fetch RM1,000 or more. The

dilemma of the farmers is compounded by the fact that tigers are protected

animals and cannot be harmed in any way unless they attack humans.

 

“More than 500 heads of cattle have been lost to tigers since 1987,” says Mat

Zin Mat Uyob, 42, chief of the Jerangau scheme settlers. “I have sold all my

cattle as I can no longer bear the losses.”

 

Given that the survival of the tigers is at stake should the villagers take

matters into their own hands, the United Kingdom WWF and WWF Japan provided

initial funding to establish the Tiger-Human Conflict Resolution Project in FJB

in 1999.

 

This study aims to reduce the tiger-human conflict in Jerangau and develop a

model plan for other conflict areas in the peninsula. The chief strategy

employed at FJB is to reduce the chances of cattle coming into contact with

tigers. This is a big challenge for WWF Malaysia’s scientific officer Mohd Azlan

Jayasila who is studying tigers in Jerangau, as it involves changing the age-old

practice of allowing cattle to roam freely in the settlement.

 

The farmers are advised to ensure that their cattle graze in safe areas away

from the forest fringes. They have to make sure too that their livestock are

kept in the pen between 5.30pm and 8am as tigers are most active during dusk and

dawn.

 

Initially Azlan met with resentment from the villagers who were used to their

kampung way of rearing livestock. But he is glad that there has been a change of

attitude among the settlers and they are more cooperative now.

 

Hamzah Abdul Ghani, 36, welcomes the change in the method of cattle-rearing. “I

cannot accept the free-ranging method that some farmers use around here. For

one, it makes it difficult to identify any disease that the cows bring home.

Secondly, it is difficult to identify to whom certain cattle belongs to,’’ says

Hamzah who has a joint-venture with 11 other settlers in raising cattle for

income.

 

Hamzah and his friends take turns to herd their livestock back to safety every

evening. This has proven effective as they have not lost a single cow to tigers

since.

 

The paddocks have to be made more secure too. Presently, a large number of

paddocks in FJB are unable to keep away prowling tigers. “All that the tiger

need to do is to circle the paddock, and the frightened cattle will break

through the flimsy fencing and present themselves as easy prey to the hungry

tigers,’’ says Azlan.

 

Funding is the main obstacle to making the paddocks in Jerangau more secure.

Presently there are 12 paddocks, and it costs RM5,000 to make each paddock

“tiger-proof”. This is a sum quite beyond the farmers.

 

There is disturbing evidence of illegal hunting in Jerangau too, though it has

yet to be proven if someone had actually shot any tiger in the area.

 

A survey by Azlan last year uncovered an abandoned camp in the forest believed

to be set up by the orang asli. It looked as if they were brought in by

outsiders to harvest forest products and wildlife, as a tortoise shell and snake

skin were found around the camp. Still cameras mounted in the forest reserve to

photograph tigers and other wildlife show that hunting activities do occur

around FJB. However, the level of game hunting could not be determined.

Unofficial reports claim that all the sambar deer have been hunted out of

existence in the area. This is supported by the fact that no sambar deer was

photographed by the cameras.

 

Tigers generally go after large game animals such as sambar deer. Other

available prey in the Jerangau vicinity are wild boars (Sus scrofa) and barking

deer (Muntiacus muntjac). Casual hunting of small game like birds and squirrels

can inadvertently scare away wildlife that the tiger preys on.

 

In 2001 alone, unofficial reports say that at least three tigers were killed

between Jerangau and Bukit Diman. These accidents occur as the tigers were

crossing the road, presumably to get out of the encroached isolated patch of

forest north of Jerangau.

 

 

 

One of the accidents was confirmed by a driver who lodged a report at the

Jerangau police station so that he could claim for damages. In the other cases,

it was believed that the carcass was taken away by the driver or passers-by and

the organs extracted for medicinal purposes.

 

The Jerangau tiger study, when completed this year, can be used as a model

project for any area with similar tiger-human conflict. There are an estimated

500 to 600 tigers in Peninsular Malaysia.

 

However, resolving tiger-human conflicts through appropriate management methods

and development approaches is not just dependent on WWF Malaysia or the settlers

alone. The successful implementation of the project also hinges on the

cooperation extended by Felda, the various state agencies involving wildlife,

forestry, agriculture, the district office, the State Economic Planning Unit,

and Kumpulan Kayu Kayan Terengganu Sdn Bhd which holds logging concessions in

the state.

 

Inter-agency cooperation is particularly important given that Terengganu faces

an enormous temptation to log the remaining forests and convert the land to

plantations. Forest development without proper planning or consideration for

adjacent areas can have undesirable effects on tiger-human conflicts.

 

“When a forest is being actively logged, large mammals such as tigers will be

displaced,” says Azlan. “They may be forced to move elsewhere temporarily or

permanently, depending on the extent of damage caused.’’

 

He adds that each adult male tiger needs a space ranging from 40sq km to 100sq

km, depending on prey density.

 

Meanwhile, the quick-learning tigers which initally picked on livestock grazing

along jungle fringes have grown bolder. Far from fearing humans, the tigers seem

to have adapted quite well to human presence. On a few occasions, they have

actually hunted for prey very close to villages, although no one has been

attacked so far.

 

Currently, the funding provided by WWF UK is fast drying up. “We requested for

RM200,000 last year, but got less than half the amount. We are now running on a

deficit of RM120,000,” says Azlan.

 

“We are appealing to organisations, the private sector and the public to raise

funds to help the farmers with their cattle pen project. We have not received

any responses so far. This has increased anxiety among the farmers.’’

 

Data showed that between 1987 and 1997, 726 heads of cattle were reported killed

in Terengganu. It must be remembered that not all deaths are reported. Between

1997 and 1998 in FJB alone, financial losses suffered by the villagers as a

result of tiger attacks amounted to RM200,000.

 

Not surprisingly, at Jerangau tigers are viewed with a mixture of fear and

anger. “We’d kill them if we could, but they are protected animals,’’ says a

cattle farmer.

 

A few villagers have been suspected of taking matters into their own hands by

poisoning the tigers. So far at least two tigers in the Jerangau area have been

found dead under mysterious circumstances.

 

Still, there is a glimmer of hope that things may not degenerate any further.

The discernible shift in attitude among a significant section of the settlers

towards tigers is cause for cheer.

 

“When I first came to FJB, tigers were much hated,” says Azlan. “Now I hear

people say: ‘Is that our tiger in the picture?’ or ‘How many tigers do we have?’

or ‘We understand the tiger is hungry, but as long as it finishes up what it has

killed (instead of leaving a stinking, half-eaten carcass behind), it’s not that

bad’.’’

 

In a settlement where money is earned the hard way, such generosity towards the

beast that feeds off their livestock is laudable indeed.

 

 

________________________

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