Guest guest Posted October 21, 2005 Report Share Posted October 21, 2005 http://www.newwest.net/index.php/topic/article/3941/C73/L38 Grassland Conservation From Mongolia to the Front Range By Richard Martin, 10-19-05 Can you get the Broncos on TV? The Front Range is around 6000 miles from Ulaanbaatar, but there are some distinct similarities between the capital of Mongolia and our own region. For one thing, Colorado east of Boulder is, like eastern Mongolia, home to some of the world’s last intact grasslands, a critical ecosystem for dozens of endangered species. And so this week a team of Mongolian conservationists is winding up an extended tour of Colorado in an exchange hosted by The Nature Conservancy. I met the Mongolians yesterday before a presentation they gave at the Boulder HQ of the Conservancy. The leader, N. Sarantuya, is a formidable woman both physically and intellectually: the holder of a Ph.D. in biology, she was the of Strategic Planning and Management for the Mongolian Ministry of Nature and Environment before establishing the Environmental Initiative Center, a non-governmental conservation organization in Ulaanbaatar. She gave the small audience a quick lesson in the global importance of grasslands and in the similarities between Colorado and Mongolia. Both places have extensive grasslands rising to the foothills of a vast mountain range: the Rockies in Colorado and the Altai Range, which bisect much of Central Asia, in Mongolia. The latitudes are nearly identical, and both areas are home to the sort of charismatic megafauna that end up on posters and T-shirts (not to mention trophy rooms): Mongolia has some of the last remaining populations of such mythical beasts as the snow leopard, the Gobi bear, and the majestic Argali sheep, which has fostered a burgeoning big-game hunting industry in the country. Denver is the sister city of Ulaanbaatar (Boulder’s sister city is another Central Asian capital, Dushanbe, Tajikistan), and both Colorado and Mongolia are home to livestock herding, horse-centric populations whose ways of life are slowly being overtaken by modernity: cowboys in this country and nomadic herders in Central Asia. Since Mongolia became a democracy in 1990 the government has made preserving the country’s wild lands (which make up 90 percent of the territory), and the culture of its nomadic people, a priority. The former prime minister approached The Nature Conservancy several years ago with an ambitious goal: to formally protect 30 percent of Mongolia’s total territory as national parks or wilderness areas. Since then the Nature Conservancy has sent several teams of conservationists to Mongolia to help build its nascent environmental movement – and to learn from the Mongolians, who have inhabited the high prairie of Central Asia for two millennia. This week’s exchange was a step forward in building cooperation between two regions that despite long distance and cultural differences, share a spectacular, and threatened, landscape. By Richard Martin, 10-19-05 | add comment | email this story | read more like this Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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