The Mongolian wild ass population is declining due to
poaching and
competition from grazing
livestock. The
conservation status of the species is evaluated as
endangered. In 2005, a national survey based on
questionnaires, suggested that as many as 4,500 wild asses, about 20% of the whole population, may be poached each year. Moreover, political changes in the early 1990s allowed urban populations to return to
nomadic land use, resulting in a sharp increase in human and livestock numbers in many rural areas. Political and societal changes have disrupted traditional land use patterns, weakened law enforcement and also changed attitudes towards the use of natural resources, e.g., making wildlife an "open access" resource. It is expected that the re-migration of people and their livestock will result in increased wildlife–human interactions and may well threaten the survival of rare wildlife species in the
Gobi Desert. ==Conservation actions==