Together with his leopard-like spots, Navarro – a male lynx – calls out throughout mating season as he walks in direction of a digital camera lure.
Simply wanting 100cm (39 inches) in size and 45cm in top, the Iberian lynx is a uncommon sight. However there at the moment are greater than 2,000 within the wild throughout Spain and Portugal, so that you’re more likely to see them than you have been 20 years in the past.
“The Iberian lynx was very, very near extinction,” says Rodrigo Serra, who runs the replica programme throughout Spain and Portugal.
On the lowest level there have been fewer than 100 lynxes left in two populations that did not work together, and solely 25 of them have been females of reproductive age.
“The one feline species that was threatened at this stage was the sabre tooth tiger 1000’s of years in the past.”
The decline of the lynx inhabitants was partly right down to increasingly land getting used for agriculture, an increase in fatalities on the roads, and a battle for meals.
Wild rabbits are important prey for the lynx and two pandemics led to a 95% fall of their quantity.
By 2005, Portugal had no lynxes left, but it surely was additionally the yr that Spain noticed the primary litter born in captivity.
It took one other three years earlier than Portugal selected a nationwide conservation motion plan to avoid wasting the species. A Nationwide Breeding Centre for Iberian lynxes was inbuilt Silves within the Algarve.
Right here they’re monitored 24 hours a day. The intention is twofold – to arrange them for all times within the wild and to pair them for copy.
Serra speaks in a whisper, as a result of even from a distance of 200m you’ll be able to trigger stress to the animals within the 16 pens the place a lot of the animals are stored.
Generally, although, stress is strictly what the lynxes want.
“Once we discover a litter is changing into a bit extra assured, we go in and chase them and make noise so they’re scared once more and climb the fences,” says Serra. “We’re coaching them to not get near folks within the wild.”
That is partly for their very own safety, but additionally so that they steer clear of folks and their animals. “A lynx ought to be a lynx, not be handled like a home cat.”
So the lynxes by no means affiliate meals with folks, they’re fed by means of a tunnel system on the centre.
Then, when the time comes, they’re launched into the wild.
Genetics determines the place they find yourself, to decrease the dangers of inbreeding or illness. Even when a lynx was born in Portugal it is likely to be taken to Spain.
Pedro Sarmento is liable for reintroducing the lynx in Portugal and has studied the Iberian lynx for 30 years.
“As a biologist there are two issues that strike me after I’m dealing with a lynx. It is an animal with a reasonably small head for its physique and terribly huge paws. That provides them an impulse and skill to leap that are uncommon.”
The breeding programme and the return of the lynx have been hailed as nice successes, however as their numbers climb there could also be issues too.
As lynxes are sometimes launched on non-public land in Portugal, the organisers of the replica programme have to achieve an settlement with the homeowners first.
The place the animals go after that’s as much as them, and though there have been some assaults on hen coops, Sarmento says there haven’t been many.
“This could result in uneasiness inside locals. We have been strengthening the coops so lynxes cannot entry them, and in some circumstances we hold monitoring the lynxes and scare them off if wanted.”
He recounts the story of Lítio, one of many first lynxes launched in Portugal.
For six months Lítio stayed in the identical space however then the crew misplaced monitor of him.
He finally made his solution to Doñana, a nationwide park in southern Spain the place he had come from initially.
As Lítio was sick, he was handled after which returned to the replica crew within the Algarve.
Inside days of his launch from the centre he started heading again to Doñana, swimming throughout the Guadiana river to achieve Spain.
For a time he disappeared, however finally he was introduced again to the Algarve.
When he was launched for a 3rd time, Lítio didn’t enterprise again to Spain however as a substitute he walked 3km (two miles), discovered a feminine and by no means moved once more.
“He’s the oldest lynx now we have right here, and he is fathered loads of cubs ever since,” says Sarmento.
Three many years after Spain determined to avoid wasting the lynx, the species is not endangered, and Sarmento hopes it will attain a beneficial conservation standing by 2035.
For that to occur, the numbers want to achieve 5,000-6,000 within the wild.
“I noticed the species disappearing. It is surreal that we’re in a spot the place we are able to see lynxes in nature or by means of digital camera trapping virtually every day,” says Sarmento.
The replica crew should not being complacent and there are dangers concerned of their work. Final yr 80% of lynx deaths happened on the roads.
For now, although, they really feel assured the Iberian lynx has been saved.