“Humans have been
over-exploiting African elephants for centuries. More than 2,000 years ago, the
Roman Empire’s demand for ivory led to the extinction of genetically
distinct elephant populations in northern Africa. But in recent
times, population increases among southern African elephants and declines
across the rest of the continent have made it hard to clearly assess how
threatened the species is overall.
“I serve on a team of scientists that
recently reviewed African elephants’ status for the International
Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN). We compiled data from
over 400 sites across Africa, spanning 50 years of conservation efforts – and
our results were grim.
“The number of African
savanna elephants – the largest subspecies of elephants – has declined by 60% since 1990. And forest
elephants, which the IUCN is treating as a separate species for the first time,
have declined in number by over 86%. Based on our assessment, the IUCN has
changed its listing from ‘vulnerable’ for all African elephants to ‘endangered’
for savanna elephants and “critically endangered” for forest elephants.
Two species
“By separating savanna
and forest elephants into independent assessments, our report reveals the
critical state of the more elusive forest elephants, which was obscured in
previous reviews that lumped all of Africa’s elephants together. Scientific
evidence for separating the species has been building
over the past two decades, and many taxonomists felt this
recognition was long overdue.
“Increased research on
forest elephants highlights the dramatic
declines these secretive giants are undergoing. Studies
also show that they are among the slowest-reproducing mammals on the planet.
This means that even if they receive adequate protection, their recovery
will take decades.
Global threats, global
solutions
“Scientists believe that
elephant populations across Africa actually increased during the early 20th
century, when nations were entrenched in global wars and consumption of ivory
and other luxury items declined. After World War II, however, conspicuous
consumption surged. Over-hunting for ivory drove severe
declines in the number of elephants in the 1970s and 1980s.
“Thanks to interconnected global trade networks, along with porous and unregulated borders in many parts of Africa, rising ivory demand in one part of the world quickly translates into higher black market ivory prices in Africa. And these higher prices lead to poaching.
Removing elephants from
an area can pave the way for converting forests and grasslands to agriculture.
This cycle has led to the depletion of much of African elephants’ historic range.
“Habitat loss also brings
elephants and humans closer together, leading to more human-elephant conflict.
Such clashes lead to the direct loss of elephants. They also are a burden for
local communities that can erode their interest in and support for
conservation.
“While the scale of
decline in Africa’s elephant populations is overwhelming, there are many
examples of successful conservation efforts across the continent. The KAZA
(Kavango-Zambezi) Trans-frontier Conservation effort, anchored by
Botswana, holds the largest contiguous elephant population on the continent,
and that population has experienced strong growth over the past 50 years. This
success reflects government collaboration across borders and work with local
communities.
“Joint international
efforts to reduce the illegal ivory trade are raising awareness of the problems
with ivory consumption. China banned domestic ivory trade in 2017, and
concurrently ivory poaching across many elephant populations in Africa declined
– including in the largest populations in Tanzania and Kenya, which were under
severe pressure less than 10 years ago. The core population of forest elephants
in Gabon, which declined by 80% between 2004 and 2014, has
stabilized with increased government investment and reduced poaching pressure.
“Innovative work with communities in countries such as Namibia
and Kenya to enhance people’s livelihoods by developing wildlife-supported
economies has led to the protection of enormous tracts of lands as conservation
areas. And researchers and conservationists are working to find solutions to
conflicts between human activities and elephant needs that can be applied
across Africa.
“By highlighting the precarious state of Africa’s two elephant
species, my colleagues and I hope that this Red
List Assessment can help motivate African countries with
elephant populations and the international community to invest in measures that
support elephant conservation.
“Elephants provide much more than just aesthetic benefits.
Recent studies show forest elephants also play an important role in fighting
climate change by enhancing carbon storage in central African forests,
among the most important carbon reserves on the planet. The elephants disperse
seeds and thin out young trees as they forage, which makes room for larger
trees to thrive.
“Elephants also are a linchpin of the wildlife-based
economy across Africa. And elephants, in compliment with fire, are
considered to be ecosystem engineers that structure the balance between trees
and grass on Africa’s savannas. Along with many other conservation experts, I
see reversing their decline as a global imperative that requires concerted
global support" (The Conversation).
George Wittemyer,
Associate professor of Fish, Wildlife and Conservation Biology, Colorado State
University. George Wittemyer is a member of the IUCN African Elephant
Specialist Group and serves as the Chairman of the Scientific Board for Save
the Elephants, a Kenyan non-governmental organization.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.