100,000...3,200…3,009…2,304…1,044……… 0?
The countdown is on for tigers. If we want to save them, the time is NOW - we can’t wait any longer. It is the Chinese Year of the Tiger and there are just 3,200 of them left in the wild – if we don’t act now in the next Year of the Tiger there will be NO tigers left. The future for wild tigers is at a tipping point – without immediate, strong action, the next few years will be catastrophic.
WWF has a plan to save the Tiger from extinction – but we need your help! Find out more : http://assets.panda.org/downloads/tiger_appeal_2_v2.pdf
Get a free recycling bag from Envirosac and win a free bike. Find out more at http://www.wwf.sg
Geneva, Switzerland — Rhino poaching worldwide is poised to
hit a 15-year-high driven by Asian demand for horns, according to new
research.
Poachers in Africa and Asia are killing an ever increasing
number of rhinos—an estimated two to three a week in some areas—to meet a
growing demand for horns believed in some countries to have medicinal value,
according to a briefing to a key international wildlife trade body by WWF, the
International Union for the Conservation of Nature (IUCN) and their affiliated
wildlife trade monitoring network TRAFFIC.
The impact in
Africa
An estimated three rhinos were illegally killed each
month in all of Africa from 2000-05, out of a population of around 18,000. In
contrast, 12 rhinoceroses now are being poached each month in South Africa and
Zimbabwe alone, the three groups told the 58th meeting of the Convention on
International Trade in Endangered Species Standing Committee this week in
Geneva.
“Illegal rhino horn trade to destinations in Asia is driving the
killing, with growing evidence of involvement of Vietnamese, Chinese and Thai
nationals in the illegal procurement and transport of rhino horn out of Africa,”
the briefing states.
The impact in
Asia
Meanwhile, rhino poaching is also problematic in Asia.
About 10 rhinos have been poached in India and at least seven in Nepal since
January alone—out of a combined population of only 2,400 endangered
rhinos.
“Rhinos are in a desperate situation,” said Dr. Susan Lieberman,
Director of the Species Programme, WWF-International. “This is the worst rhino
poaching we have seen in many years and it is critical for governments to stand
up and take action to stop this deadly threat to rhinos worldwide. It is time to
crack down on organized criminal elements responsible for this trade, and to
vastly increase assistance to range countries in their enforcement
efforts.”
Almost all rhino species are listed in CITES (the Convention on
Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora) in Appendix I, which means
that any international trade of any rhino parts for commercial purposes is
illegal.
“Increased demand for rhino horn, alongside a lack of law
enforcement, a low level of prosecutions for poachers who are actually arrested
and increasingly daring attempts by poachers and thieves to obtain the horn is
proving to be too much for rhinos and some populations are seriously declining,”
said Steven Broad, Executive Director of TRAFFIC.
The situation is
particularly dire in Zimbabwe where such problems are threatening the success of
more than a decade’s work of bringing rhino populations back to healthy levels.
For example, earlier this week a park ranger arrested with overwhelming
evidence against him for having killed three rhinos in the Chipinge Safari Area,
was acquitted without any satisfactory explanation for the verdict. Similarly,
in September 2008, a gang of four Zimbabwean poachers who admitted to killing 18
rhinos were also freed in a failed judiciary process.
The briefing
concludes that governments need “an accurate and up-to-date picture of the
status, conservation and trade in African and Asian rhinoceroses, as well as the
factors driving the consumption of rhinoceros horn, so that firm international
action can be taken to arrest this immediate threat to rhinoceros populations
worldwide.”
“Rhino populations in both Africa and Asia are being
seriously threatened by poaching and illegal trade,” said Dr Jane Smart,
Director of IUCN’s Biodiversity Conservation Group. “IUCN and its African and
Asian Rhino Specialist Groups are working hard to gather data and information on
rhinos so that CITES parties can make informed decisions and ensure that rhinos
are still here for generations to come.”
The 58th meeting of the CITES
Standing Committee is being held in Geneva from 6 -10 July. This issue will be
further discussed at the 15th meeting of the Conference of the Parties to CITES,
which will be held in Doha, Qatar March 13-25, 2010.