Kazakhstan’s snow leopard population has climbed back to levels not seen since the 1980s, with an estimated 152 to 189 individuals now living in the country’s mountain ranges. A 26% increase since 2019 C.E. marks one of the clearest conservation wins in Central Asia — and a rare example of a big cat population moving in the right direction.
At a glance
- Snow leopard population: Kazakhstan now hosts an estimated 152 to 189 individuals — numbers last recorded in the 1980s C.E., driven by expanded protected areas and coordinated monitoring.
- Camera trap technology: Advanced tools including camera traps, drones, and thermal imaging are now active across 14 natural areas, confirming sightings and tracking movement patterns across key habitats.
- Satellite telemetry: In 2021 C.E., researchers collared 11 leopards to monitor their movements, helping scientists understand behavior and reduce conflicts with herders in remote communities.
A comeback decades in the making
The snow leopard — known in Kazakhstan as the irbis — is listed on the IUCN Red List as vulnerable, and appears in the national Red Books of all 12 countries within its range. In Kazakhstan, the cats live in the Altai, Tien Shan, and Zhetysu Alatau mountain systems — vast, rugged landscapes that were long difficult to monitor.
Since 2018 C.E., Kazakhstan has run a dedicated snow leopard conservation project under the United Nations Development Programme. Alexei Grachev, executive director of the Snow Leopard Foundation and head of the Snow Leopard Monitoring Center, says the species’ numbers have now stabilized, with protected areas playing a central role.
Key habitats include Ile-Alatau National Park, Altyn-Emel, and the Katon-Karagai Reserve. The Zhetysu region has the highest population density, thanks to abundant prey, active protection, and low human interference.
Young leopards and the edges of protection
One of the most striking recent findings came from Katon-Karagai Park, where the species was first confirmed by photo trap only in 2020 C.E. A female with two cubs has since been spotted there — a signal that recovery is spreading into areas once thought too marginal.
Still, the picture isn’t entirely bright. High mortality among juvenile leopards remains a serious concern. Without enough protected land, young cats are pushed into neighboring countries, where the risk of human-wildlife conflict rises sharply. Kazakhstan is addressing this partly through financial compensation to herders whose livestock is killed by leopards — reducing the incentive for retaliatory hunting.
New protected areas are also in development. The proposed Merken Regional Park in Zhambyl Oblast would extend the network of safe habitat, giving young leopards somewhere to go.
Regional cooperation and what comes next
Kazakhstan hasn’t worked alone. Collaborative agreements with Kyrgyzstan, backed by international memorandums, have strengthened cross-border conservation — important because snow leopards don’t follow political boundaries. The Global Snow Leopard and Ecosystem Protection Program coordinates action across all 12 range countries, and Kazakhstan’s results are among the most encouraging in the network.
The Snow Leopard Trust, which works across Central Asia, notes that human-wildlife conflict and poaching remain the species’ biggest threats globally. Kazakhstan’s compensation model for herders is increasingly seen as a practical template — though scaling it requires sustained funding and community buy-in that isn’t guaranteed.
Climate change adds a longer-term layer of risk. As mountain ecosystems shift, prey species move and habitat boundaries change in ways that are hard to predict. The country’s investment in satellite telemetry and drone monitoring will be essential for tracking how leopards adapt.
What Kazakhstan has shown is that focused, sustained effort — combining protected areas, monitoring technology, community incentives, and regional cooperation — can reverse decline for one of the world’s most elusive big cats. That’s not a small thing.
Read more
For more on this story, see: Times of Central Asia
For more from Good News for Humankind, see:
- Marie-Louise Eta becomes the first female head coach in men’s top-flight European football
- Ghana establishes a new marine protected area at Cape Three Points
- The Good News for Humankind archive on Kazakhstan
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