For the Arabs of the UAE, the desert, mountains and seas have

long provided raw materials for building homes or constructing

sailing craft, as well as a sustainable source of food on which

they have depended for their very survival. Given the relative

sparcity of life in the desert, and the unpredictability of life-giving

rain, it is hardly surprising that conservation has been at the

very core of man’s existence in this part of Arabia. Add to this

the fact that Islam calls upon its followers to treat all creatures

with deep respect, and you may begin to appreciate why wildlife,

the environment and conservation are given such a high priority

in a land where the rapid pace of development brings potential

conflicts between man and nature into sharp focus.


When the British explorer Wilfred Thesiger was completing his own

epic journey across the Empty Quarter in the early 1950s, as he

so vividly describes in his book Arabian Sands, he went to stay

with Sheikh Zayed, who lived at that time in the Al-Ain/Buraimi

oasis. His first meeting with the man who was to become ruler

of Abu Dhabi and President of the United Arab Emirates took place

in humble, natural surroundings. Zayed was sitting on the ground

under an acacia tree outside the fort. Thesiger recalls: ‘He was

a powerfully built man of about thirty with a brown beard. He

had a strong intelligent face, with steady, observant eyes and

his manner was quiet but masterful……He wore a dagger and a

cartridge belt; his rifle lay on the sand beside him.’ Thesiger

commented that the locals held Zayed in great respect for he was

a true bedouin with all the local knowledge of the desert and

wildlife that the word implied.

Thesiger and his colleagues spent a month as Zayed’s guest and

during the visit they went hunting together with falcons. On one

occasion a falcon took off across the sand-hills and was eventually

discovered by Zayed and Thesiger who were on camel-back. After

recovering the bird Zayed pointed to some oily splashes on the

ground, explaining to Thesiger that the houbara bustard squirts

this secretion at an attacking falcon, temporarily blinding the

predator. Thesiger goes on to describe encounter after encounter

in which Zayed quietly imparted his understanding of nature and

his love of wildlife. The experience made a powerful impression

on the British explorer and is beautifully recounted in his classic

book.

In this year of triple celebrations for the UAE – 25 years of

federation; 25 years of Sheikh Zayed’s Presidency and 30 years

of his rule over the emirate of Abu Dhabi, there has been great

interest in retrospective analysis of what the last quarter century

has meant for the seven emirates that comprise the UAE. It is

clear from such analysis that its people have benefited significantly

from the efforts of a government committed to social development

and improvement of facilities in virtually every aspect of their

lives. However, one could easily argue that, given the country’s

vast oil wealth, it would have been inconceivable that this would

not be the case. The fact that this development has taken place

in an atmosphere of respect for its cultural heritage, and with

a committed acknowledgement of the need to conserve its natural

world, is perhaps more impressive than the infrastructural and

socio-economic strides which have transformed the nation.

The challenge of maintaining a balance between man and the environment

has been central to Sheikh Zayed’s entire period of stewardship.

His conviction that the deserts can be turned green again, as

they once were before climate changed to one of the driest on

the globe, has led him to support a massive campaign of afforestation

and irrigation, utilizing waste water from urban and industrial

developments to make grass, crops and trees grow in place of shifting

sands. The results of this sustained endeavour are particularly

apparent as one flies into the UAE, hardly failing to observe

from the air that vast tracts of previously arid desert are now

forested – more than 130 million trees having been planted during

the past 25 years. On the ground, as one drives from airport to

city centre, the solid greenery of tree-lined freeways reinforces

an impression of lush tropical vegetation rather than arid desert,

and even in the urban heartlands of Abu Dhabi and Dubai one can

hardly fail to be impressed by the carefully cultivated parklands

which have become a magnet for migrating birds and other native

wildlife.

But what of the natural Emirates, that land beyond city and highway,

far from the sight of high-rise buildings and the noise of vehicles?

Is there anything left of the Arabia that once existed, before

oil was discovered and before Zayed and his people decided to

build a modern, developed country? Can it be true that leopards

still live among the mountains, or that the Arabian tahr, until

recently thought to be extinct in the UAE, still survives in isolated

‘hidden’ valleys, or indeed that the elusive sea-cow or dugong

still swims among its sheltered offshore islands? Just how successful

has this Arabian country been at balancing the demands of man

against those of wildlife?

Natural Emirates, published by Trident Press as part of the UAE’s

Silver Jubilee celebrations, addresses such questions directly

in a series of well informed, beautifully illustrated chapters

on the UAE’s wildlife, written by experts in their individual

fields. You will be relieved to read that leopards do indeed still

live in the UAE, in larger numbers than were previously estimated,

but still not sufficient to ensure their future survival. Protection

of the leopard has provided a rallying call for a grass-roots

conservation programme spearheaded by the Arabian Leopard Trust

which has established a captive breeding pair of leopards in the

UAE and is working towards creation of a reserve for their protection

in the wild.

After a carcass of a tahr was found near a water pool on Jebel

Hafit in 1982, it was generally thought that the tahr was extinct

outside of Oman. That remained the view until a 1995 survey of

possible leopard habitats undertaken by Chris and Tilde Stuart,

and organized by the Arabian Leopard Trust. The Stuarts are knowledgeable

trackers and naturalists who have honed their skills over many

years of fieldwork in Africa, Arabia and in other regions. Whilst

clambering along a ledge in the Shimailiyyah mountains of the

UAE their attention was drawn by the sound of a falling pebble

on the opposite side of the ravine. Not only did they catch sight

of an adult and young tahr, but they also took the first ever

photographs of live tahr in the Emirates. Seen against the dark

purplish rocks, the tahr were almost invisible. Reproduced in

Natural Emirates, this picture seems to speak out from the page.

The adult tahr, facing the camera, appeals to us all to respect

the wilderness in which it still survives.

Dugongs have been hunted in this region for thousands of years,

as evidenced by the presence of their skeletal remains in ancient

middens and at burial sites. Dugongs in the UAE mostly inhabit

the shallow waters around the islands of Murawah and Bu Tina to

the west of Abu Dhabi, but their range extends further west to

the border of Qatar and beyond, and there are still occasional

sightings to the east around Jebel Ali, Umm al-Qaiwain and Ras

al-Khaimah. The UAE’s rich and extensive seagrass beds are vital

to the continued survival of this sea-mammal in the Gulf region.

Natural Emirates not only provides us with data on the survival

of dugongs in the UAE but also backs it up with some rare photographs

of them taken during a marine survey of Abu Dhabi’s offshore waters.

As one turns the pages of Natural Emirates it is hard to be unimpressed

by the sheer variety of wildlife that the country supports. Despite

the demands of industrial and infrastructural development, habitats

have been preserved and nature has been respected to a far greater

extent than one finds in many other countries. Whilst the mangrove

has often been regarded as an annoying encumberance, fair game

for removal or infilling of its shallow habitat, in the Emirates

large areas of mangrove have not only been preserved but fresh

stands are constantly being planted, creating new habitats for

marine life and for many birds and other animals. Meanwhile, the

UAE’s oldest mangroves, at Khor Kalba on the east coast, remain

home of the endemic sub-species of white-collared kingfisher (Halcyon

chloris kalbaensis,) one of the rarest birds in the world.

Whilst no single book can cover the entire subject of the UAE’s

natural world, Natural Emirates makes a bold attempt to present

a balanced picture of what is to be found there, offering as much

information on insects and reptiles, for example as for the more

popular birds and mammals. Chapters on geology and palaeontology

are refreshingly written for the general reader whilst retaining

their scientific accuracy and the chapter on plantlife is compiled

more with a view to encouraging the amateur naturalist to explore

the wonders of local flora than to provide a blow by blow taxonomic

account of individual species.

Above all however, this book is a visual celebration of a segment

of Arabia’s natural world that has received relatively little

media attention in the past, but which clearly merits a much greater

focus in future. Award winning photographers, Jens and Hanne Eriksen

were especially commissioned to photograph for the book. In addition

many of the authors have contributed their own unique UAE wildlife

photographs, covering subjects as diverse as snakes shedding their

skin to sperm whales breaching, and you have a book that will

not only impress its readers but which will play a positive role

in supporting the conservation of the UAE’s natural world for

future generations to experience and enjoy.