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Over recent years there has been a marked change in public attitudes

towards wildlife conservation in Arabia. Every country on the

peninsula has made a concerted effort to educate its people about

the need to care for nature and respect the environment in which

they live. The process of education is now entering a new phase

in which the public are encouraged to take an interest in the

work of different conservation bodies. At the National Commission

for Wildlife Conservation and Development, based at Riyadh in

Saudi Arabia, a new Centre for Environmental Awareness has been

built. Arabian Wildlife asked Dr Iyad Nader, who is responsible

for the day to day management of the centre, to give the background

to the project.


NCWCD/MEPPSThere can be no doubt that development depends upon the proper

conservation of natural resources for the benefit of present and

future generations. In order to make the public aware of the danger

facing some of the wildlife habitats and wildlife in the Kingdom

of Saudi Arabia, a Visitors Centre for Environmental Awareness

was established by the NCWCD under the guidance of HRH Prince

Saud al-Faisal, managing director of the Commission. The project’s

development was co-ordinated by NCWCD Secretary General, Dr. Abdulaziz

Abuzinada.

Official inauguration of the Visitors Centre was on 27 February

1990 when HRH Prince Sultan Bin Abdulaziz, Second Deputy Prime

Minister, Minister of Defence and Aviation, Inspector General

and Chairman of the Board of Directors of NCWCD visited the centre

and declared it open.

Different exhibits in the Centre illustrate and emphasise the

role, activities and achievements of the Commission in the field

of environmental protection and wildlife conservation. It is not

intended to be a museum in its own right but does mark the first

step towards implementation of the Commission’s plan to establish

a National Museum of Natural History.

It is the first facility of its kind in Saudi Arabia and displays

a wide range of natural habitats. In line with the Commission’s

general approach towards conservation, the prime focus is on natural

habitats rather than individual species but since each habitat

has its characteristic species, the displays also portray important

animals and plants associated with various ecosystems.

Located within the grounds of the National Commission for Wildlife

Conservation and Development’s headquarters, the outer walls of

the Centre are decorated with murals depicting ‘rock-art’ found

in Saudi Arabia and drawn originally by people who lived here

thousands of years ago. The animals in their ancient drawings

certainly reflect the keen interest that our predecessors had

in wildlife.

A brief tour of the Centre’s exhibits begins with a display of

the vast desert in the Empty Quarter where its characteristic

inhabitant, the Arabian oryx, roamed freely until a few decades

ago. The exhibit shows an adult male together with a younger oryx,

both standing among their typical food-species of native desert

plants. Fortunately, the clock is being set-back for the oryx

which, although becoming extinct in the wild in 1972, now has

a healthy population of animals with a considerable number back

in the wild (see article in this issue).

Another major exhibit depicts loose reddish sands of the Great

Nafud Desert where a graceful female reem or sand gazelle together

with its young remind visitors of the importance of this desert

region for survival of this and other Arabian species. The reem

is one of three gazelle species still found in Saudi Arabia but

numbers have declined, partly due to overhunting that occurred

in the past. The Commission is engaged on a captive breeding programme

with a view to reintroductions into protected reserves. At the

time of writing, reem have been reintroduced to Mahazat As Said

whilst idmi was released into the Ibex Reserve. There are over

two hundred free-ranging gazelle in these two areas.

NCWCD/MEPPSBut Saudi Arabia is by no means all sandy desert. Rocky sandstone

habitats are very important and one of the Commission’s ten protected

areas comprises the sandstone outcrops of Hawta, located about

200 kms south-west of Riyadh, where an Ibex Reserve has been established.

The reserve contains a viable population of the Nubian ibex, Capra

ibex, which is shown in the exhibit of this habitat, together

with an idmi, or mountain gazelle, and a hardy and ubiquitous

brown-necked raven. The exhibit also features a desert pool with

several native plants found in this habitat.

In sharp contrast to the above natural environments, with their

balanced ecosystems and wildlife, the next exhibit is intended

to show what happens when Man’s impact is unchecked. The fragile

arid ecosystems of the desert are all too easily destroyed. Over-grazing

and habitat destruction leave inedible and poisonous plants, dead

animals, a criss-cross of vehicle tracks and the inevitable piles

of unsightly and often harmful trash.

Sadly, the Arabian red-necked ostrich, largest of Arabia’s birds,

became extinct in 1940. Its cousin, the blue-necked ostrich, is

exhibited as a mother bird with two chicks and four huge eggs.

The Commission is breeding the ostrich with a view to its reintroduction

to the wild at a future date.

Dense green vegetation with rich and varied plant and animal life,

much of which has close affinities with African wildlife, is also

found in Saudi Arabia, providing a stark contrast to its more

widely recognised desert environment. Highland habitats of south-western

parts of the Kingdom are depicted in a unique display that portrays

a protected area of the Asir Region, the Raydah escarpment, located

approximately ten kilometres north-west of Abha. This is the habitat

of the Hamadryas baboon which is by far the most numerous large

mammal in the western and south-western highlands. The species’

population has grown as a result of increased food supply associated

with garbage dumping and predator removal. Although it is good

to see a wild animal such as the Hamadryas baboon flourishing,

it is actually doing so because of a disturbed natural balance

within the ecosystem.

The Kingdom’s colourful and fascinating marine-life is displayed

in two large closed circuit aquaria full of coral-reef fish and

living corals. Great care has been taken to create a natural balance

within the tanks which provide a compelling attraction for many

visitors. Reef-fish, corals, sea-anemones, starfish, sea-urchins

and other invertebrates all flourish in the marine aquaria. Open

exhibits to each side of these live displays show the shy and

rare marine-mammal, the dugong and a number of threatening (but

also threatened) sharks.

The Centre also exhibits a range of other wildlife species including

an interesting collection of insects, a few examples of lizards,

snakes, birds of prey and game birds, in addition to a some smaller

mammals. Saudi Arabia is a member of the Convention on International

Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Flora and Fauna(CITES) and

a display at the Centre shows how the Commission’s education policy

is directed at discouraging the public from buying, selling or

in any way handling such species.

Man’s relationship with the environment is depicted in a display

entitled the Pyramid of Life. Photographs and illustrations are

used to communicate basic ecological principles. Life in its varied

forms depends upon plant-life and there is an inextricable inter-dependence

between animal and plant-life. The pyramid of life is explained,

starting with plants’ photosynthesis and culminating in carnivores.

Effects of over-grazing and habitat destruction on vegetation

and their combined effects of unbalancing previous stable ecosystems

are also graphically presented. This section of words and pictures

rounds off with a display showing how wise use of natural resources

will result in a balanced ecosystem in which the different elements

co-exist harmoniously. It emphasises that an unbalanced habitat

will ultimately affect man himself.

The Centre has gained considerable popularity since it was opened.

In addition to regular visitors, prearranged tours by groups,

mainly school children, are conducted daily throughout the academic

year. The Centre is open during office hours, Saturday to Wednesday,

and visits can be arranged through the office of the Secretary

General of the NCWCD.