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Elephants

Nov 6 2023

Elephants are another animal which is endangered because of greed, around 90% of African elephants have been wiped out in the past century largely to ivory trade, is said that an estimated 415,000 wild elephants alive today. Asian elephants are also under threat, having declined by at least 50% in the last three generations.

The average lifespan of elephants is about 65 years of age or more, an elephant calf’s first year of life is it most vulnerable time with mortality rates exceeding 30%.

WWF wrote an article on this, and this is what they have to say:

Despite a ban on the international trade in ivory, African elephants are still being poached in large numbers. Tens of thousands of elephants are being killed every year for their ivory tusks. The ivory is often carved into ornaments and jewellery – China is the biggest consumer market for such products.

The ban on international trade was introduced in 1989 by CITES (Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora) after years of unprecedented poaching. In the 1980s, an estimated 100,000 elephants were being killed per year and up to 80% of herds were lost in some regions.

The ban allowed some populations to recover, especially where elephants were adequately protected.

But there has been an upsurge in poaching and illegal ivory trafficking in recent years, driven by increasing demand in Asia, which has led to steep declines in forest elephant numbers and some savannah elephant populations.

Insufficient anti-poaching capacity, weak law enforcement and corruption undermine efforts to stop the poaching and trafficking in some countries.

Habitat loss and conflict with communities

Most elephant habitat still extends outside protected areas, and the rapid growth of human populations and the extension of agriculture into rangelands and forests formerly considered unsuitable for farming mean that elephant habitat is continuing to be lost.

Increasing conflict with people.

As human populations expand, more land is being converted to agriculture. So, elephant habitat is shrinking and becoming more fragmented, and people and elephants are increasingly coming into contact – and conflict – with each other.

Elephants sometimes raid farmers’ fields and damage their crops – affecting the farmers’ livelihoods – and may even kill people. Elephants are sometimes killed in retaliation.

With human populations continuing to grow across their range, habitat loss and degradation – and conflict with communities – will remain major threats to elephants’ survival.

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