The Jabal Samhan Nature Reserve was established in 1997 after
camera trap records of leopards were obtained; in the following decade, 17 individual adult leopards and one cub were identified. At least ten wild leopards were live-captured in Yemen since the early 1990s and sold to zoos; some have been placed in conservation breeding centers in the UAE and Saudi Arabia. Revenue from sources such as hunting rights and
ecotourism, services such as roads and school employment in protected areas would encourage local residents to participate in leopard conservation. Furthermore, well-managed protected areas will ensure the continued survival of the species until other factors enhancing its survival become effective. Public awareness, fruitful consideration of the needs of local people and ecological studies may take years to be useful. In Yemen, efforts are underway to conserve leopards at two sites, including Hawf Protected Area. In Saudi Arabia, authorities have undertaken efforts to create Sharaan Nature Reserve, a wildlife sanctuary for the leopard in the area of
Al-`Ula. In Israel, Arabian leopards are being bred in
Yotvata Hai-Bar Nature Reserve for future reintroduction.
Arabian Leopard Day In February 2022, the
Council of Ministers of Saudi Arabia declared
10 February as the "Arabian Leopard Day" in an effort to protect it and raise awareness of its conservation status. On the second Arabian Leopard Day in February 2023, the
Royal Commission for Al-'Ula created a $25 million fund to promote conservation efforts and signed a 10-year deal with
Panthera Corporation worth $20 million. In June 2023, The
United Nations voted to adopt a resolution to officially designate 10 February as an international day for the Arabian leopard.
In captivity The first Arabian leopards were captured in southern Oman and registered in the
studbook in 1985.
Captive breeding was initiated in 1995 at the Oman Mammal Breeding Centre and is operated at a regional level on the Arabian Peninsula. Since 1999, the regional studbook is coordinated and managed by personnel of the
Breeding Centre for Endangered Arabian Wildlife, Sharjah. , nine institutions participated in the breeding programme and kept 42 males, 32 females, and three unsexed leopards, of which 19 were wild caught. This captive population comprised 14 founders that have an unequal number of descendants. In 2016, the leopards and other fauna were transferred from the breeding centre in Sharjah to
Al Hefaiyah Conservation Centre in the eastern area of
Kalba. In Yemen, leopards were kept at
Ta'izz and
Sana'a Zoos. Two cubs were born on 26 April 2019 at the Prince Saud Al-Faisal Wildlife Research Center in
Ta'if. == See also ==