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Double_Trouble
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Reged: 27/04/06
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African Elephants Being Slaughtered
      #72664 - 28/02/07 02:20 AM

Beats the hell out of me if this is fact or fiction but I saw this on MSN this morning and thought it may be of interest... Comments?

DT


Demand for ivory threatens elephant survival
Study estimates 23,000 were slaughtered last year alone
Elephants, like this one in South Africa, remain under threat after an effort to stop illegal hunting has all but fallen apart.

WASHINGTON - An international effort to halt the illegal killing of elephants for their ivory tusks has all but collapsed in most of Africa, leaving officials and advocates alarmed about the survival of the species. A study released yesterday estimates that as many as 23,000 of the animals were slaughtered last year alone.

A team of wildlife and law enforcement experts concluded that a widely hailed 1989 ban on international sales of ivory has been overwhelmed by exploding demand for ivory in Japan and newly rich China and declining support for anti-poaching programs.




"Right now, things are really much worse than before the ban," said Samuel Wasser of the University of Washington, lead author of the study, funded jointly by the U.S. government and several nonprofit groups.


"Almost half of Africa's elephants had been slaughtered in the eight years before the ban, but now the situation is even more extreme because the number of animals is so much lower to begin with," he said. "And unlike in the late '80s, the public has forgotten about this issue."

Wasser said that poaching poses a renewed threat to the survival of regional herds in many countries and to the entire subspecies of forest elephants, which he said is being "annihilated" in central Africa.

Wasser said that reports of a rebound in elephant numbers had produced a distorted view of the situation. Of the roughly 400,000 elephants in the African wild, he said, about 130,000 are in Botswana, where they are well protected to the point that they have overbred. Of the elephants elsewhere in Africa, more than 23,000, 1 in 12, were killed last year, the researchers estimated.

The estimate is based on the 54,000 pounds of ivory confiscated in 12 international seizures in the year that ended August 2006, and an assumption by customs officials that they seize only 10 percent of smuggled contraband. Ivory is in demand for jewelry and for "hankos," used to stamp personal seals and signatures in parts of East Asia.

"People read these days about elephant overpopulation in places like Botswana, and how elephants are coming more and more into deadly contact with people," Wasser said. "But that's one small piece of the story. Overwhelmingly, what we have across Africa is a widespread slaughter of elephants that is getting worse by the day."

The report said that the ban on international ivory sales was effective at first, largely because wealthy nations provided money to police game parks and go after poachers. Elephant populations rebounded substantially, especially in southern Africa, but as more exceptions to the ban were allowed and funding was cut back, illegal killings resumed.

Compounding the problem, ivory smuggling has become increasingly the province of organized crime, with narcotics and other contraband often being shipped with the tusks. Ivory prices have skyrocketed, Wasser said, and the incentives for killing elephants for their tusks have never been greater.

DNA tracking
Wasser's report, published in the online version of the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, also described a unique effort to determine the origins of 532 unusually large tusks confiscated in Singapore in 2002. Using DNA analysis, the group led by Wasser determined that the tusks came from African savannah elephants similar to those found in and around the nation of Zambia.

The seizure coincided with a request by the Zambian government for permission to sell tusks it had in storage. The U.N. treaty that banned international ivory sales in 1989, the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora (CITES), allows limited sales of tusks harvested from animals that die naturally if the home government can demonstrate that it is controlling poaching.

In its request, Zambia said that 135 elephants had been killed illegally in the country in the past decade, but the researchers estimated that 3,000 to 6,500 had been killed in the short period before the Singapore shipment.

Much of the funding for the DNA analysis came from the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service's African Elephant Conservation program, established by Congress in 1988. The study was funded mainly by the agency and the International Fund for Animal Welfare.

Wasser and the other authors, who include an Interpol employee and African conservation officials, said that an aggressive, well-funded anti-poaching program could be highly effective now because DNA testing can pinpoint where the animals are being killed. The report also said that an education program in East Asia is essential to curb the demand for ivory.

"I don't think people in China and Japan fully understand the crisis that their ivory purchases have caused," Wasser said. He proposed something like a current Chinese campaign against shark-fin soup, in which a popular basketball player asks, "What's wrong with us that we kill the sharks for the fin?"

China and Japan
While the 1989 ban forbids all unapproved sales of ivory between nations, illegal material that slips through can become legal once it turns up in a different country. Before the 1989 ban, most smuggled ivory was shipped to Europe, the United States and Japan. Now, the report found, most of it is going to China and Japan, although authorities say that some is turning up again in the United States.

Japan and China have petitioned to become authorized "trading partners" for any legalized international ivory trading. In October 2006, a CITES committee authorized Japan provisionally but deferred a decision on China. At that meeting, however, Japan failed to report 2.8 tons of illegal ivory it had seized several months before, showing, some officials said, that smuggling remains a problem.

© 2007 The Washington Post Company

--------------------
Double Trouble,
Speak not of what you do not know.
Listen up when it's time to.


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NitroXAdministrator
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Reged: 25/12/02
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Re: African Elephants Being Slaughtered [Re: Double_Trouble]
      #72671 - 28/02/07 03:23 AM

Quote:

In its request, Zambia said that 135 elephants had been killed illegally in the country in the past decade, but the researchers estimated that 3,000 to 6,500 had been killed in the short period before the Singapore shipment.




Sounds like fantasy to me ie up to 6500 elephants poached in Zambia alone.

Out of what total population?

Why pick on Zambia?

Isn't Zambia trying to get its elephant trophies accepted for import as hunting trophies into the USA? Plus the quoted desire to sell ivory stockpiles.

Quote:

Using DNA analysis, the group led by Wasser determined that the tusks came from African savannah elephants similar to those found in and around the nation of Zambia.




Yeah and like savannah elephants from Zimbabwe, Botswana, Zimbabwe, Tanzania, Kenya etc etc

Why pick out Zambia as the most likely source of "savannah elephants"?

--------------------
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...
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"I love the smell of cordite in the morning."
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Savuti_One_Shot
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Reged: 24/01/07
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Re: African Elephants Being Slaughtered [Re: NitroX]
      #72732 - 28/02/07 12:07 PM

Why would you believe anything you see on (P)MSN?
Especially if the study was funded by the International Fund for Animal Welfare.

Elephants, and all game animals fot that matter, are flourishing today in locales where thay have some VALUE. Botswana's herd is huge because they want a strong huntable population for the revenue it ptoduces. Once the animals become worthless, by banning their hunting as in Kenya, the results are predictable.

SOS

--------------------
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475Guy
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Re: African Elephants Being Slaughtered [Re: Double_Trouble]
      #72756 - 28/02/07 02:42 PM

Another "GREEN" story told by folks on a liberal-socialist news network. Yes, there are elephants that are "slaughtered"(POACHED), but where are the numbers coming from? Where is the proof, where is the evidence? Sounds like more left-wing BS.

--------------------
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They bid me take my place among
them in the Halls of Valhalla,
Where the brave may live forever.


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DoubleD
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Reged: 23/11/03
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Re: African Elephants Being Slaughtered [Re: 475Guy]
      #72760 - 28/02/07 04:29 PM

Then there is this....


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

SA should consider elephant cull, says WWF

By Stella Mapenzauswa

Johannesburg - South Africa needs to consider restarting elephant culls because growing numbers of the mammal now threaten local habitats, the WWF conservation group has said.

"What has happened in the last 10 years is that protected areas had elephant numbers grow to where they are actually suppressing the habitat, the vegetation," Rob Little, acting chief executive of WWF South Africa, told reporters late on Friday.

"We believe that the culling may be a last resort, and should usually be regarded as a last resort, but it should be available as a option."

Little was speaking in advance of the unveiling on Wednesday of a new elephant management plan by South Africa's environmental affairs and tourism ministry.

The WWF has made recommendations towards the plan, which is expected to include a resumption of culling to cut growing elephant numbers in the country's flagship Kruger National Park and other reserves.

Last year South Africa postponed a controversial policy to resume culling elephants in Kruger in the face of vocal opposition from some conservationists who say the practice, which involves the rounding up and shooting of entire family groups, is cruel.

Some critics also question the validity of the science used to justify the practice. They argue that other plant-eating animals, which are smaller in size but exist in bigger numbers, would move into areas left vacant by slaughtered elephants and have a similar impact on vegetation.

Government scientists have said the elephants at Kruger have swelled to well over 12 000 since culling was stopped in 1994 after a public outcry. Numbers have also risen in other smaller parks.

Over the past decade South Africa has tried to manage growing elephant numbers in the country through transferring herds to new areas and in some cases, expanding protected areas.

"What we have said was that the nations that have elephants that are signatories to CITES (Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora) must be allowed to take wise, sound scientific-based decisions on the management of the species," said Little.

The option of elephant contraception may also be considered.



Published on the Web by IOL on 2007-02-25 22:22:26



--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
© Independent Online 2005. All rights reserved. IOL publishes this article in good faith but is not liable for any loss or damage caused by reliance on the information it contains.

--------------------
DD, Ret.


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EricD
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Reged: 27/02/04
Posts: 4636
Re: African Elephants Being Slaughtered [Re: Savuti_One_Shot]
      #72767 - 28/02/07 09:05 PM

Quote:

Botswana's herd is huge because they want a strong huntable population for the revenue it ptoduces.





Actually, I have the impression after talking several times with people in the Botswana govt./wildlife Dept. that they want to reduce the numbers of elephant in their country, which most people agree is at least twice the number of what is sustainable. Unfortunately the government is being pressured by the photo safari industy to not do so, under threat that the big companies (Such as Wilderness Safaris, etc) will pull out of Botswana in favour of other countries, AND launch a massive worldwide anti-Botswana PR campaign, if elephants are culled in larger numbers than the relatively very few that are hunted for sport. Then of couse there are apparently a few high placed govt. officials who personally profit from the so-called "eco-tourism" that photo-safaris represent, and thus don't want the boat (or their income) to be rocked...

The sad thing about this is that the consequences can be seen by anyone who visits Chobe for example, where much of it looks like a battlefield due to overgrazing by elephants. Which in turn wipes out other smaller animals species that are not powerful enough to make the long trip between food and water, as all the edible vegitation near the river permantently recedes. But I guess the greenies don't mind the demise of smaller animals, as long as they get to take pictures of the bigger ones...

It is presumed that the over-large elephant population in Botswana will eventually reach a point where it will crash by itself, due to starvation and disease. But again, I guess the greenies prefer to close their eyes to reality.

Erik


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