Category: Програма за закрепнување на балнканскиот рис

  • Five small grants projects from Struga and Vevchani to be financially supported by the Balkan Lynx Recovery Programme

    On 10 and 11 December in Vevchani a meeting of the jury responsible for the selection of projects for the education of the local population and raising public awareness of the proper use of natural resources of Jablanica was held. The awarded projects will be implemented during 2015.

    The jury was membered by representatives of MES, EuroNatur from Germany, the Society for the Protection and Preservation of the environment in Albania (PPNEA), and a representative of Regional Rural Development Standing Working Group of South Eastern Europe (SWG). From a total of 12 proposals jury selected the following projects:

    –  “Creating a network of environmental organisations in Struga and Vevchani” – Enhalon, Struga;
    –  “Strengthening the capacities of the Municipality of Vevchani for organised, systematic and harmonised protection of natural values ​​of Jablanica” – Municipality of Vevchani;
    –  “Youth in movement” – Mountaineering Ecological Society – Zakamen, Struga;
    –  “Mount Jablanica – source of natural resources” – Pharmacy Lekofarm, Struga;
    –  “To protect our Mount Jablanica for a happier childhood” – Soroptimist Club Association, Struga.

    The Macedonian Ecological Society together with other jury members congratulates all organisations and wishes them a successful project implementation.

    MES has been implementing the Balkan Lynx Recovery Programme ever since 2006 together with PPNEA – Albania, EuroNatur – Germany, KORA – Switzerland, with financial support from the MAVA Foundation – Switzerland. Its main objective is the conservation of the Balkan lynx native population in Macedonia and Albania.

    As part of the project, Jablanica with its natural values ​​has been identified as an important cross-border area for protection, and it is part of the Balkan Green Belt. Within the project’s scope, MES is working on the valorisation of mountain’s natural values, promotion of sustainable use of natural resources, and direct involvement of the locals in conservation efforts through the implementation of small grants programmes. Several small grants projects for the Jablanica-Shebenik Mountain Range will be funded in Albania, encompassing the Balkan Lynx Recovery Program.

  • Open Call for Small Grants projects for Mount Jablanica

    The Macedonian Ecological Society will officially announce a Call for Small Grant Projects on the 2 October in Struga. The project proposals should be focused on the natural values of Jablanica Mountain and sustainable use of the natural resources. The deadline for submission of the project proposals is 15 November.
    More information on the application are available here.

  • Camera-trapping survey in the protected area Jasen and Pelister National Park

    The Macedonian Ecological Society, in cooperation with the Public Enterprise for Managing and Protection of the Multipurpose Area “Jasen” and the Pelister National Park, started camera-trapping activities in the mentioned areas. The aim is to confirm the presence of lynx and its prey species in such areas, and the presence of other large carnivores, and if there is sufficient data, to make estimations about number of lynx individuals present in both areas.

    The camera-trapping survey in the protected area Jasen has already started. So far, 8 camera-traps have been deployed in cooperation with the rangers, and so, by the beginning of February, a total of 20-25 camera-traps are expected to be set. The camera-trapping survey in the Pelister National park will start in the beginning of February, whereas the plan is to set around 20 camera-traps. In both areas, the camera-trapping surveys will last until the beginning of April 2014.

     

  • Lynx Conservation Action Plan in Mavrovo National Park

    The cooperation between the Macedonian Ecological Society and Mavrovo National Park continued with the organisation of the second workshop for the development of the Action Plan to save the Balkan lynx from extinction.  The workshop was organised in Mavrovo on 4-5 November 2013. Action Plan framework defining goals, objectives and activities were the main result accomplished during this workshop. Participants of the event included forest engineers, chief game wardens and game wardens from the park, MES Balkan lynx team, project partners from the Swiss NGO KORA and representatives from the Ministry of Environment and Physical Planning and the Faculty of Forestry from Skopje. This workshop was facilitated by a professional facilitator, experienced in the field of large carnivore management.

    Next gathering will take place 16-18 December 2013, whereon the finalisation of the Action Plan and the work on the new pilot project for the conservation of the Balkan lynx in the park are both foreseen.

  • Eurasian Lynx Research and Conservation Workshop

    In the period 21-25 October 2013, representatives from MES attended a workshop for Eurasian Lynx Research and Conservation Workshop held in Bern, Switzerland. The workshop was organised by the Swiss organisation KORA, and besides MES, participants also included people from the University of Lvov and Schmalhausen Institute of Zoology in Kiev from Ukraine, the Technical University of Zvolen, Slovak Wildlife Society and ZOO Bojnice from Slovakia.

    The workshop was dedicated to the scientific approaches for the conservation of the Eurasian lynx population, with emphasis on the critically endangered Balkan lynx in Macedonia, and the autochthonous and reintroduced Carpathian lynx populations in Ukraine and Slovakia, and in Switzerland, respectively. With presentations and discussions, the participants provided a short overview of theories and concepts for studying and conserving lynx and practical field applications and data analysis and management.

  • Initial Workshop for Development of Action Plan for Balkan Lynx Protection within Mavrovo National Park

    MES, together with Mavrovo National Park, organised a workshop elaborating the prospect to develop an action plan for the protection of Balkan lynx on the territory of the park and its surrounding area.

    Ongoing projects and activities realised within the Balkan Lynx Recovery Programme, carried out by MES in the last 7 years, were presented during the meeting attended by representatives from Mavrovo National Park and the Swiss organisation KORA.

    According to the Mavrovo Park representatives, the idea of developing an action plan for the protection of the Balkan lynx is welcome and should be realised as soon as possible, so that the positive trend in Balkan lynx population in the area be preserved.

    Besides this meeting, a series of workshops is planned for defining the mutual document which should, in fact, strengthen the cooperation between Mavrovo National Park and the Macedonian Ecological Society.

    As a matter of fact, Mavrovo National Park and its environs make up the core and sole area with confirmed reproduction of the Balkan lynx.

    The workshop was carried out in the Makpetrol Hotel in Mavrovo on 16 and 17 September 2013 and it was financially supported by the MAVA foundation, which provides funding for the Balkan Lynx Recovery Programme.

  • Balkan Lynx Baseline Survey in Montenegro and Kosovo

    One of the fundamental activities when the Balkan Lynx Recovery Programme started was the Baseline Survey. The knowledge of the locals did not only extend our insight into wildlife in the countryside of Macedonia and Albania, but, to a certain level, it also helped raise public awareness about this critically endangered animal. Seeking consistency of data gathered in the two countries, this year we have started the Baseline Survey in the Balkan lynx northern potential area: Kosovo and Montenegro. Partners for such valuable activity are the NGOs Finch from Prizren, ERA from Peć, CZIP from Podgorica and the “National Parks of Montenegro” government agency.

    Results from the Baseline Survey will help in completing the picture of the conservation status of the Balkan lynx in order to make sound assessment and officially declare its status using the IUCN Red List Criteria of Threatened Species.

  • MES as part of Eco Green Festival in Mavrovo

    The Macedonian Ecological Society (MES) was part of the Eco Green Festival in Mavrovo, taking place 16-18 August 2013. At the event, MES presented its projects by distributing promotional materials, posters and books on protected areas in Macedonia, Shar Mountain, Mount Jablanica, Monostpitovo Swamp, the brown bear, and many other topics. Visitors had the opportunity to ask questions, inform themselves about matters of personal interest and talk to Society representatives.

    Presentations focused on the Balkan Recovery Programme (BLRP), presented by MES representative Gjorgje Ivanov (also a member of the BLRP team). The stand was accompanied with panels providing details about lynx, its home, feeding habits, and also its status in the Balkans – and what we can do to conserve this species.

  • Celebration of the Successfully Completed Small Projects at Shara Mountain

    The closing event for the project “Promotion of the Natural Values of the Shara Mountain by lectures on natural environment and involvement of the stakeholders” took place on 25 May this year at Popova Shapka, with more than 100 participants. This project was organised by MES, as a national coordinator, and the Center for Development and Improvement of Public Life (CDIPL), as a local coordinator, with the international collaboration with EuroNatur, our longstanding partner from Germany, and financially supported by the German DBU Foundation (Deutsche Bundesstiftung Umwelt).

    The official part of the event consisted of welcome speeches from  the MES president Ljupcho Melovski, the Euronatur representative Gabriel Schwaderer and the DBU representative Claudia Domel. As the project coordinator, Dime Melovski presented the accomplishments of all the applicants who carried out small grants, as the main activities of this project. Traditional music, national costumes, food, the documentary “Shara’s Eyes” and the puppet show for the youngest “Meet Sharco, Marco and their friends” were part of the unofficial programme of this event. In the framework of this event, there was a presentation for each project on stalls where the visitors had the opportunity to see the accomplishments and the promotional materials for the 20 projects financially supported by MES.

    The event was featured in the media, that is, in the national televisions Telma and Sitel, as well as in the local television KISS, which had also been part of the small projects carried out at the Shara mountain.

    We hope that with the help of this event MES will bring closer to the local citizens the idea for proclamation of the Shara mountain to be a national park. By doing this, new possibilities will emerge for the benefit from the protected areas and their grand significance.

  • 2013 Camera-trapping Session in Mavrovo

    The MES team for conservation of the Balkan lynx, in collaboration with the employees in the Mavrovo National Park, initiated the third systematic camera-trapping session in this national park. The session began on 9 March and will last exactly 60 days. The results from these sessions will provide an exact measurement of the quantity of the lynx population in what is for now the only region in Macedonia with confirmed lynx reproduction and, unfortunately, the only known source of the population so far. These results will further on provide information about the number of the population of the lynx in the suitable habitats in Southwest Balkan.

    Moreover, comparison of current results and those from 2008 and 2010 will show park’s population trend. This exceptionally important ecological parameter will contribute to obtaining further insights about the critical status of this animal.

    Finally, the confirmation of presence of lynx main prey (roe deer and chamois) and its abundance carries great significance for the future survival of the lynx, not only in the protected areas, but also in the rest of the region.

    MES expresses deep gratitude to the Hunting Prevention Service within the park for unselfishly sharing its knowledge about the presence of lynx in the park and selecting suitable camera-trapping sites. Dejan Georgievski and Marija Vasilevikj, MES volunteers, have offered great help in the realisation of this year’s session.