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Call for Applications The Saiga Conservation Alliance (SCA) recognises that it is imperative to support the next generation of conservationists, and so with their Young Conservation Leaders award they will be able to support five aspiring conservationists (individuals or groups) with grants of $1000 each, (given in two payments of $500, with the second one conditional on good progress). The awards will support a 12 month project which links to the ongoing work of the SCA in the winner's country and they are requesting applications from conservationists between the ages of 12 and 30 who live in China, Kazakhstan, Mongolia, Russia or Uzbekistan.
First blog from the field! Hello, I'm on the train… converging on Heathrow today you might see handful of people lugging microscopes, test tubes and camping paraphernalia - on their way to join an ACBK-led expedition to last year's saiga die-off sites. There, we hope to learn more about what caused the dramatic events of May 2015. Above all, we hope to see surviving saigas, we hope to see calves being born, and we hope not to see unusual levels of sickness or death. Beyond that, the data and samples we aim to gather will give a more complete picture of the local vegetation and other features at the sites during calving, which was impossible to survey fully last year, as well as the…
Here is a lovely short clip of another AMAZING mural by Rory McCann. This time Rory went to Kalmykia and inspired the next generation of young conservationists there! Thanks go to Wildlife Conservation Network, WWF Russia and the Saiga Conservation Alliance for making this possible.
Following the tragic events of 2015 in Kazakhstan, Stephen Zuther and a team of scientists including Richard Kock from Royal Veterinary College London revisited the saiga antelope calving sites exactly one year on in 2016. The journey was not without its tiny frustrations! Watch this short video by Deutsche Welle documenting their research expedition.