SPNL volunteer caught wild animals and filmed them in Anjar

SPNL volunteer Berj Tamborian caught wild animals and filmed the scenes  in Hima Anjar. Tamborian recorded the scenes he created by feeding several animals including bedger, hyena, river otter, porcupine, red fox, rock partridge, and weasle.

Mammals are perhaps the hardest group of animals to see in the wild. Many, such as the mice, voles and shrews are small. Many only come out at night – or are most active then. But mostly they are hard to see because they are rare and shy of humans. Of course, these last two statements are linked; they are rare because they have been persecuted, and are shy because they are still hunted. Unfortunately, many species that were found in Lebanon in historic times are now extinct in the country and are rare internationally.

However, the last Brown Bear (Ursus arctos syriacus), and Leopard (Panthera pardus) in Lebanon were hunted in the early 20th Century, and both species are still found in small numbers in the wider region.

It is not only the large fierce animals that have been lost from the Lebanese mammal list. Large herbivores such as the Fallow Deer (Dama mesopotamica), and Nubian Ibex (Capra ibex) are also extinct.

Despite millennia of hunting in Lebanon many species are still with us, albeit some with tiny and highly threatened populations. Even such large predators as the Wolf and Striped Hyena, shown below, can still be found in Lebanon’s wilder spots.

To see wild mammals you have to be very patient, quiet and lucky! However, evidence that they are to be found is all around – if you know what to look for. Common signs of mammal activity include footprints and droppings. Certain species leave other evidence e.g. the quills of Porcupines and the earth hills (below) left by the underground rodent the Lesser Mole Rat (Spalax leucodon). Although few people have seen Mole Rats (they look rather like hairy sausages) you just need to take a walk in the Lebanese hills and you will find their characteristic excavations, showing there are many under your feet.

Al Hima Magazine 4th Issue

This edition of Al-Hima is published amid conflict and displacement—a painful reality Lebanon knows well. Yet, the Lebanese people and SPNL remain resilient, supporting displaced families while advancing environmental and development goals.

Read Previous issues

spot_img
spot_img

More like this

The Rufous-tailed Rock Thrush — A Vanishing Jewel Among...

Spotted recently in the scenic heights of Hammana, a solitary male Rufous-tailed Rock Thrush (Monticola saxatilis) stunned...

The Poor Man’s Weatherglass: Spring Wildflowers of Lebanon

As winter loosens its grip, Lebanon’s landscapes awaken with a spectacular display of spring wildflowers, each bloom...

The Common Myna: A Bold Urban Invader Captured at...

Earlier today, wildlife photographer and the manager of SPNL's Hima Hammana Raptor Observatory, Chadi Saad, captured a striking...