Africa’s Rhinos face worst poaching crisis in decades
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Africa’s Rhinos face worst poaching crisis in decades
Gland, Switzerland, Friday 25 March 2011 (IUCN) – Well-equipped, sophisticated organized crime syndicates have killed more than 800 African rhinos in the past three years - just for their horns. With the most serious poaching upsurge in South Africa, Zimbabwe and Kenya, Africa’s top rhino experts recently met in South Africa to assess the status of rhinos across the continent and to identify strategies to combat the poaching crisis.
“Although good biological management and anti-poaching efforts have led to modest population gains for both species of African rhino, we are still very concerned about the increasing involvement of organized criminal poaching networks, and that, unless the rapid escalation in poaching in recent years can be halted, continental rhino numbers could once again start to decline,” says Dr. Richard Emslie, scientific officer for the IUCN Species Survival Commission’s (SSC) African Rhino Specialist Group (AfRSG).
South Africa alone lost 333 rhinos last
year and so far this year has lost more than 70. Most rhino
horns leaving Africa are destined for Southeast Asian
medicinal markets that are believed to be driving the
poaching epidemic. In particular, Vietnamese nationals have
been repeatedly implicated in rhino crimes in South
Africa.
Black Rhinos (Diceros bicornis) currently
number 4,840 (up from 4,240 in 2007), whilst White Rhinos
(Ceratotherium simum) are more numerous, with a
population of 20,150 (up from 17,500 in 2007). Population
numbers are increasing, however, with the rise in poaching,
there is still cause for concern due to inadequate funding
to combat well-resourced organized criminals.
Rhino
experts urged greater cooperation between wildlife
investigators, police and prosecutors; magistrates and
judges to be more sensitive to rhino issues; and assistance
in developing new tools and technologies to detect and
intercept rhino poachers and horn traffickers. While the
number of arrests has increased there is an urgent need for
improved conviction rates and increased penalties for
rhino-related crimes in some countries.
The AfRSG
commended recent initiatives to combat poaching. These
include the establishment of a National Wildlife Crime
Reaction Unit in South Africa, increasing protection
throughout the rhinos’ range, DNA fingerprinting of rhino
horn, regional information sharing and engaging with the
authorities in Vietnam. In addition, wildlife agencies are
working closely with private and community rhino custodians,
as well as support organizations, to protect rhinos.
“In South Africa, a large number of rhinos live on private land. Rhino management, including control of rhino horn stockpiles and security, needs to be improved and coordinated among rhino holders,” says Simon Stuart, chair of the IUCN Species Survival Commission. “This is essential if we are going to face the poaching crisis head on.”
In some countries, White Rhinos are still hunted as trophies. The group noted that some professional hunters have demonstrated questionable and unethical behaviour, adding that improved management of the allocation and monitoring of hunting permit applications, especially in some South African provinces, needs urgent attention.
Notes to editors
The US Fish &
Wildlife Service’s Rhino & Tiger Conservation Fund,
WWF’s African Rhino Programme, International Rhino
Foundation, Save the Rhino International and South African
National Parks sponsored this meeting of the IUCN Species
Survival Commission (SSC) African Rhino Specialist Group
(AfRSG), biologists and wildlife managers, as well as
government representatives from Kenya, Malawi, Namibia,
South Africa, Swaziland, Zambia and Zimbabwe.
Photos
are available from: http://www.sendspace.com/file/qf0oe2
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About the International Rhino Foundation
The International Rhino Foundation is a global not-for-profit organization dedicated to the survival of the world’s rhino species through conservation and research, and increasing awareness about the plight of the rhino. To learn more about the IRF or make a direct contribution to help save the African rhinos, visit www.rhinos-irf.org.
ENDS