Vets act to save Poland’s lynx

Growling furiously, Benek the lynx cub looks up with baleful eyes as a veterinarian squats by his cage and takes aim with a tranquiliser gun. “It’ll take a half hour to knock him out,” says Jakub Kotowicz, vice-president of the Rehabilitation Centre...

Growling furiously, Benek the lynx cub looks up with baleful eyes as a veterinarian squats by his cage and takes aim with a tranquiliser gun.

“It’ll take a half hour to knock him out,” says Jakub Kotowicz, vice-president of the Rehabilitation Centre for Protected Animals in Przemysl, southeastern Poland.

The feline snarls as the dart strikes its haunch, but minutes later is toying kitten-like with another pink, fluffy-tailed missile which went off target.

“If he was a bear, we’d need a whole night to get him under,” jokes the centre’s head Radoslaw Fedaczynski.

Eradicated from much of Europe 150 years ago, lynx still roam the continent’s forested north and east.

Europe’s population of Eurasian lynx is estimated at 7,500 to 8,000 – excluding those in Russia – with the bulk found in Romania, Scandinavia and the Baltic states.

An estimated 200 of the solitary wildcats live in Poland, mostly clustered near the northeastern borders with Belarus, Lithuania and Russia’s Kaliningrad territory and in the southern Carpathian Mountains, Benek’s home turf.

The Eurasian lynx is in far better shape than its critically-endangered Spanish and Portuguese cousin the Iberian lynx, about 100 of which remain in the wild.

But life isn’t easy and Benek – Polish for “Benny” – is lucky.

After becoming separated from his mother, and too young to hunt game properly, he emerged from the forest.

Locals called the care centre after finding him just before Christmas in a village.

“He was trying to catch chickens from the region’s farms but got chased up a tree by some dogs. When we found him, he was starving, exhausted and needed our help,” said Andrzej Fedaczynski, 52, who with his son Radoslaw runs the regular veterinary practice doubling as a voluntary care centre for wild animals.

Hunted, often by the ruling elite, until the fall of Poland’s communist regime in 1989, lynx have since enjoyed legal protection.

But Krzysztof Schmidt of Poland’s Mammal Research Institute insists the threats are still manifold here.

Shrinking forests have restricted their territory and the thinning of woodlands makes it harder for lynx to stalk or hide out to rest, he said.

“Then there’s the development of road networks in terms of further habitat fragmentation, roadkills to a lesser extent, and poaching, although that’s not very significant,” he added.

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