The snow leopard (Panthera uncia) is the most elusive of the world's big cats. It lives between roughly 3,000 and 5,500 metres in the great mountain ranges of Central and South Asia — the Himalayas, Karakoram, Hindu Kush, Pamirs, Tien Shan and Altai — and is so rarely seen that local Himalayan languages call it the "ghost of the mountains." For decades, scientists worked with population estimates that were essentially educated guesses.
WARN is preparing to operate in Pakistan, which is home to one of the most important snow leopard populations outside China. The country's Gilgit-Baltistan and Khyber Pakhtunkhwa regions hold an estimated 200-420 individuals — a meaningful share of the global wild population.
How many snow leopards are left?
The most credible global estimate, based on systematic camera-trap and genetic surveys, places the wild snow leopard population at 4,000-6,500 individuals. The species was downlisted from Endangered to Vulnerable on the IUCN Red List in 2017 — but this reflected better counting methods, not a recovering population. Many conservation biologists believe the species is still declining in the most poorly-surveyed parts of its range.
The three biggest threats
- Retaliatory killing. The single largest direct cause of snow leopard mortality. When a snow leopard takes goats or sheep from a remote herder's corral, the economic loss is severe — and the response is often a poisoning or a shooting. WHO and WOAH-aligned animal-welfare workers in the region report that the most effective interventions are predator-proof corrals and livestock-insurance schemes.
- Poaching. Snow leopard pelts and bones are trafficked into the same illegal markets that drive tiger poaching, with bones increasingly used as a tiger-bone substitute in some traditional-medicine supply chains. UNODC has repeatedly flagged the bones-and-skins trade as a transnational organised-crime issue.
- Prey depletion. Snow leopards rely on wild blue sheep, ibex, markhor and argali. Where livestock displaces these wild ungulates, snow leopards turn to domestic animals, escalating conflict and the retaliatory-killing cycle.
What works: community conservancies and corrals
The most consistently successful snow leopard projects in Pakistan, Nepal and Kyrgyzstan combine three elements: predator-proof corrals built into community livestock infrastructure, livestock insurance schemes that compensate herders for verified predator losses, and community-led wildlife conservancies that share tourism or research income with villages that protect snow leopards. Where all three operate, retaliatory killing drops sharply.
How WARN fits in
WARN's planned Pakistan programme is principally a street-dog welfare programme (see our Karachi street dogs appeal) — but snow leopard country is the same country, and we expect to support partner work on retaliatory-killing prevention in the high north as our Pakistan operations mature. We do not currently fund snow leopard fieldwork ourselves and we will not pretend otherwise.
Sources: IUCN Red List, UNEP-WCMC, CITES Appendix I listing, UNODC World Wildlife Crime Report.
We need your support to make this happen
World Animal Rescue Network is at the launch stage of this work. We do not yet have rescue numbers to share — and that is exactly why your support matters now. Every donation helps us put trained teams on the ground, secure veterinary supplies and equipment, and reach the first animals before they are lost.
Donate today to fund our first deployments, or sponsor an animal to back a specific species through rehabilitation. You can also join the network as a volunteer, fundraiser, or monthly supporter.