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The designations employed and the presentation of material on this map do not imply the expression of any opinion whatsoever on the part of IUCN concerning the legal status of any state, city or area or its authorities, or concerning the delimitation of its frontiers or boundaries.

contributions

Snow Leopard Trust

2022_SLT_Femelle F13_Tost.png
2021-Mongolia-Tost-First year cub.jpg
2 Photo Credit - Emmanuel Keller - Snow Leopard Trust.jpg
2022_SLT_Mâle Sym_Tost.png
child livestock little girl holding goat 3 Shawna.jpg
smallRedBabyBooties.jpg
kazakh woman spinning Credit - Snow Leopard Trust - Charles Dye.jpg
SPinning Wool SNow Leopard Enterprises Mongolia.JPG
31_03_2016_2_livestock.JPG

The Snow Leopard Trust studies the snow leopard and protects its habitat. It supports the herders in their breeding work and helps them to develop the wool economy, in exchange for respecting one of the most endangered felines in the world. In order to study the snow leopard population and estimate its evolution, about twenty individuals are tracked by GPS. In the most vulnerable territories for the preservation of this majestic feline, community rangers act and intervene on the front line. They often work in difficult conditions, sometimes putting their own lives at risk, to fight illegal hunting. Travelling up to several thousand kilometers a month on their motorbikes, they patrol the Tost Nature Reserve in southern Mongolia to prevent poaching, but also to record traces of snow leopard passage and to record the presence of rare plants for example.

  • Snow Leopard Trust 2021 Impact Report.pdf

Potential conservation benefits in saving biodiversity

Potential reduction of species extinction risk resulting from threat abatement actions

Absolute value (STAR)

19.1

1.5% of the total biodiversity conservation potential of Mongolia is covered by this project.

1,293.3

0.4% of Asia's biodiversity conservation potential is from Mongolia.

309,761.9

25.9% of global biodiversity conservation potential is from Asia.

The chart below represents the relative disaggregation of the selected contribution's total potential opportunity for reducing global species extinction risk through taking actions to abate different threats to species within its boundaries. The percentages refer to the amount of the total opportunity that could potentially be achieved through abating that particular threat.