UAE

Video: A walk through the Dubai Desert Conservation Reserve

The protected area helped bring the Arabian Oryx back from the brink of extinction
The protected area helped bring the Arabian Oryx back from the brink of extinction.
Image Credit: Anas Thacharpadikkal/Gulf News

Dubai: It’s 4am on a Tuesday. While most of Dubai is still asleep, Gerhard Erasmus is ready to leave for work. The South African expat who manages the Dubai Desert Conservation Reserve heads a team of 15 conservation officers.

His team including Spanish conservation officer Maria Jose Martin must reach the reserve before daybreak for today’s mission – surveying the population of spiny-tailed lizards.

It’s not an easy task, because spiny-tailed lizards are shy creatures and the conservation reserve spans 225 square kilometers, almost five per cent of Dubai’s total land area.

Classified as ‘vulnerable’ on the IUCN (International Union for Conservation of Nature) list, these reptiles are among the many other native species being protected on the reserve.

The Gulf News team joined Erasmus and Martin on one of their daily visits, to find out more.

The fenced area, which lies about 40 kilometers away from the city, is not open to the public. Camels are also kept out of this reserve because, for many species like the spiny-tailed lizard, competition for grazing is a reason they are on the threatened list.

With 12 years of experience, Erasmus swiftly and excitedly pointed at what looked like a dead log lying in the sand, a few 100 meters away from our vehicle.

“Look, there’s a spiny-tailed lizard,” he said.

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