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SAVING THE PALLAS' CAT
WILDLIFE INITIATIVE AND PARAJUMPERS’ SEARCH FOR ONE OF THE WORLD’S MOST ELUSIVE ANIMALS
Against a backdrop of awe-inspiring mountains, their harsh beauty silhouetted by the vivid blues and pinks of a summer sunset, a person is carefully setting up an intricate web of motion-detection cameras. The unforgiving terrain and changeable climate of the Central Mongolian steppe landscape often make this work difficult, but its purpose is crucial: to capture sightings of the elusive Pallas’ cat.
With its dense grey fur, compact body and piercing eyes, the feline is perfectly suited to its habitat in the rocky landscape of the Bayan-Unjuul district – and equally good at staying hidden. It’s this propensity for camouflage that makes the Pallas’ cat one of the most elusive species known to man. In fact, almost nothing is known about its habits in the wild.
That’s why Parajumpers has teamed up with Wildlife Initiative, a non-profit organization dedicated to the conservation of animals under threat. Through this project, we’re trying to find out the number of cats in their natural habitat, as well as how they’re affected by threats such as predators, disease and the impact of climate change.
From Wildlife Initiative’s establishment in 2020, the NPO has been integral in efforts to conserve mammals across the globe, from lions to snow leopards. But no matter where Wildlife Initiative’s work takes them, there’s one constant: a belief in the power of community. For them, this involves collaborating with local people to gain irreplaceable insight, accessing knowledge known only to those who have a deep connection to the land.
For the Pallas’ cat initiative, this means relying on local team members like Otgombiembe. Like many generations of her ancestors before her, she’s a nomadic herder who lives and works on the steppe. It’s a symbiotic relationship between humans and the natural world – and one that’s kept alive by Otgombiembe’s instinctual respect, knowledge and understanding of the landscape and the animals that live there.
This invaluable expertise is combined with cutting-edge technological innovation. For this project, forty cameras were used across a 45-square-kilometre location. Gathering data in this terrain is hard work – and practical yet comfortable performance wear is a necessity.
For protection against the harsh winds and ever-fluctuating temperatures of the Mongolian steppe, the Wildlife Initiative team wore Parajumpers’ classic Gobi Spring jacket, its yellow Solotex poplin vibrant against the neutral tones of the rocky landscape. This was layered over a light T-shirt, and paired with our Rescue Uniform pants, made from hard-wearing stretch ripstop.
And for the blazing sunshine that illuminates the vast horizon, Wildlife Initiative chose canvas hats, light muslin shirts and easy-to-wear shorts from our Safariana series.
The hard work of the team pays off: the team records around 23 Pallas’ cats making hundreds of journeys. Analysing this data involves identifying individual cats in order to estimate population density, as well as gathering information to verify what experts believed was Pallas’ cat’s main food source: the pica and the Mongolian silver vole. But it’s through this intense data capture and interpretation – the result of many hours of painstaking hard work - that we’ve been able, for the first time, to truly begin to understand the Pallas’ cat.
It’s this dedication – the commitment to hard work, adventure, and sheer determination, no matter the circumstances – that inspires and motivates Parajumpers’ efforts to support organizations like the Wildlife Initiative.
DISCOVER OUR SPECIAL PROJECTS
VOICES FROM AN ICY COAST
The Parajumpers Stories speak of lives outside the ordinary, lived in the remotest corners of earth where powerful forces of nature make everyday survival a challenge.
Svalbard in Norwegian means “Icy Coast”. Yet Heidi Sevestre, a resident ‘ice doctor’, has seen the troubling signs that this frozen landscape has changed in recent decades.
The rugged beauty of Svalbard can make it difficult to leave. Just ask Jason Roberts, originally from Australia and one of the long- time residents of the Norwegian Archipelago.
“Guiding guests through the wilderness of Svalbard is “the best job you can have”, says Kristin Eriksson. At just 23, Kristin has already been a nature guide on 3 different Continents.
In the last decade, more and more people have come to Svalbard motivated by the beauty of the place but also by the challenge of what it means to survive both as a community as well as an individual in such a unique location.