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about job for mercenary in fair conservation efforts and zoologists

There are some folk names for other animals. Dr
.Karl Shucker writed broadly about some of the folk names of animals.
Eberhard's (2002) creature monumantal book is gathering especially
folk taxonomical material (including cryptozoological).
There was in XIX century polish explorer, Grąbczewski (1925), who in
Pamir distinguised three kinds of bears: Leucurus, tien shan bear and
asiatic black bear. I suspect that so called three kinds of yetis are
in the fact three kinds of bears living in Tibet and around. Suddenly,
there can be more than those carnivores in the region that those
three. I think one of the known brown bears subspecies could be the
famous ancient polar bear. Morover Grąbczewski found one of the bears
deep in the mountains and..... this creature was firstly from far
mistaken identified as human. It was hunter (this bear) and attacked
marmots. The bear shaking his head of discontent.
Next issue, there was expedition in Ecuador by Angel Moran Fores, that
reported a pretty quantity of creatures. So, example esakar paki is
ethnoknown name for reddish, young collared peccary. Tshenkutshen or
rainbow tiger is also known in modern taxonomy as ocelot or margay.
Tsere-yawa is bush dog. (Morant Forés 1999). Hans Shomburgk (e.g.
1913) reported some forms of mammalian creatures and herpetofauna in
Africa (Im deutschen Sudan 1913). I am sure plenty of them can be
known species, but there will be also noted that some vertebrates,
even larger one can be unknown for science. Althought distinguish them
between one to another is quite uncertainly. There are also e.g. some
"mystery" large birds in Central Asia. In Zarybuł mountains near
Samarkanda (nowadays Uzbekistan) existed Falcon Zarybułak-laczyn,
exhibing extraodrinary ferocious. Plenty of times Grąbczewski (1925)
observed as this small birds attacking cranes with great
aggressivenes. Falcon attecked one heron and dug up to neck so hard
that there was difficult to separate one of another. It seems to be
one of the Falco, possible one of the central asiatic species.
This is piece of speculation but it seems that there in Papua New
Guinea "could" lived Greater adjutant Leptoptilos dubius that is now
relict bird call by me as "true modern pterosaur" and that could be
sure existed in Papua-New Guinea in the historical times. One wicked
evil birds have bare pterosaur-like beak, long legs known in flight as
"tail" and existed in Papuan remote lands, in thick forests glades
during that migration routes.

I have some data unpublished yet about unidentified biodiversity in
Central Asia in regions that can was changes environmentally
throughout last centuries. Natives known local fauna well, including
vertebrates biodiversity (e.g. Caucacus, northern Iraq etc.) and
habitats that are not yet well described. But there are still many
questions to resolving. This is really far and ferocious lands.

With that mail is attached short booklet for practise. If it will be
helpful in anyway it can be published on criptozoologia.
Critical-existed populations are those undocumented. Those populations
are too small for continous detecting in environment. They are living
in low abundance (known as very rare). Some of them are provided by
ethnoknown account or dead bodies. Bodies or specimens are part of
populations. In the future week I will started building work and I am not sure for
available internet. But I can continuing research in future.I think that cryptozoology/ ethnozoology should be more environmental-based coincided with ecology and conservation, especially useful in little explored lands and working for save species (including unknown) with these humans living over there.
Interestingly are those feral or wild humans that I suppose exist in nowadays in remote areas in so-called social groups and create nest in woods. Of course, unrecognized folklore of ethnic groups of Central Asia is rich with creatures that are very rare one. Additivelly, as I supposed biodiversity research can be a greatly linked with ethnozoology and human-biodiversity prosperity within remote areas and forgotten.

Properly mentioned bear in Grąbczewski work: malignant and agressive is Ursus arctos isabellinus (not leucurus, my mistake) (ancient polar bear? I am not sure).
Here within email is short material with bibliography.

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