"WHAT YOU DO MAKES A DIFFERENCE, AND YOU HAVE TO DECIDE WHAT KIND OF DIFFERENCE YOU WANT TO MAKE. THE GREATEST DANGER TO OUR FUTURE IS APATHY."
- DR. JANE GOODALL
Thelma and Louise live
with three other prides on a wooded island in Namibia’s Nkasa Rupara National
Park. These prides sometimes hunt outside the park, near villages where local
farmers graze their cattle. Unprotected livestock make easy prey for lions, and
farmers who want to protect their livelihoods will kill lions in retaliation.
After retaliatory killing wiped out an entire
pride in Nkasa Rupara in 2013, Panthera and the Kwando Carnivore Project built
65 lion-proof kraals in the area—with incredible results. In 2016, no cows have
been attacked inside these kraals, and not a single lion has been killed.
Thanks to these
lifesaving efforts, Thelma and Louise have successfully raised four male cubs—
we call them John, Paul, George and Ringo—into spirited “teenagers.” These
young lions will soon set out in search of their own territories, likely in
landscapes where livestock are not kept in lion-proof kraals.
Tragically, the
brothers will probably be poisoned or shot—unless we do something to protect
them. Donate now and help us build more lion-proof kraals like the ones that
saved Thelma, Louise and their cubs. Until October 15, your gift will be
matched, dollar for dollar, by a generous donor up to $50,000.
The illegal wildlife
trade also blights local communities. International criminal gangs are involved
in the $20bn annual trade that is now the fourth largest global illegal
activity after drugs, counterfeiting and human trafficking. Their activities
cause instability and threaten national security in many African nations,
blocking much-needed development in impoverished rural communities.
The UK’s domestic
ivory market provides ample cover for illegal activity. Between 2009 and 2014,
40% of all the seizures made by the UK’s Border Force were ivory items and in
2015, 110kg of ivory were seized at Heathrow airport in one of the UK’s largest
hauls of illegal ivory. This is just the tip of the iceberg as ivory sold
legally in the UK domestic market is exported to illegal markets in other
countries, contributing to high prices and fuelling demand for elephant
products. Many nations have already taken action. In July 2016, the US
government passed a new law that substantially limits imports, exports and
sales of African elephant ivory, providing exceptions for some antiques and
musical instruments.
Two pups were left alone in a car while their owner ran into
a grocery store in Wayne, West Virginia. The woman left the car running so the
dogs could stay cool, but they had other plans.
Once she was in the store, the dogs somehow switched the car
into gear and went rolling straight for the store.
The joyride didn't last long. The car came to a halt when it
rolled into a concrete pillar. Shoppers ran to the runaway car to make sure
everyone was all right, only to find a dog in the driver's seat.
A little over a century ago there were perhaps a million
lions in Africa.
By the 1940s that number had dropped to about 450 000, and
today there are fewer than 20 000.
It’s a sorry tale of annihilation by man.
I can find no statistic giving a reliable, or even
unreliable, figure on the number of lions in the wild in South Africa today,
but there are apparently about 1 000 captive bred lions lined up to be shot as
trophies (known as canned lion hunting).
Apart from trophy hunting, lion bones are being sold to far
eastern countries for use in traditional Asian medicine.
Stop the freight train
— brand-new DNA study involving North American wolves and coyotes threatens to
derail the whole concept of what we consider “pure wolves,” as well as the
federal reintroduction programs dealing with them.
Researchers from
Princeton University studied the genomes from a variety of gray and red wolves
as well as coyotes. Both the gray species (Canis lupus) and the red (Canis
niger, so-named from a black phase of them) wolves were initially listed as
endangered in 1973.
The federal Endangered
Species Act allows for the protection of threatened or endangered species and
subspecies (the Mount Graham red squirrel is one of the latter) but does not
authorize safeguards for hybrids.
The U.S. Fish and
Wildlife Service may well be attempting to change the policies of the
Endangered Species Act after this recent DNA study. In the meantime, other
stakeholders in the Mexican gray wolf reintroduction here, such as ranchers,
are contemplating their own DNA studies. And the controversy is bound to continue.
The article, which can
be found on the web under the title "Whole-genome sequence analysis shows
that two endemic species of North American wolf are admixtures of the coyote
and gray wolf" says that a red wolf is about 75 percent coyote with some
gray wolf thrown in. The lesser known eastern wolf, which is not listed as an
endangered species but could be, is, according to the report, about 25 percent
to 50 percent coyote and the rest is gray wolf.
The students’ petition
was picked up and circulated by conservation groups, such as the Wildlands
Network; other petitions were folded into it. But its more than 498,369 signees
are an impressive number. In comparison, some 77,000 people signed online or
paper petitions calling for an end to oil-and-natural gas leasing off the
Southeast coast, said Oceana, although 1.4 million comments were made in a
public review including those signatures.
“One of the critical
narratives about the red wolf program is that it has lost public support. The
reality is clearly different,” said Ron Sutherland of the Wildlands Network. If
the program is ended, “it may be decades before another reintroduction is
attempted in some other Eastern state. Eventually (captive red wolf keeper)
zoos will lose interest if it is clear the wolf has no future in the wild.”
The service in
February said it was on track to make a decision on the program’s future by
summer. Asked Thursday, a spokesman did not update that schedule.
Britain’s shores are
about to get a whole lot cleaner, and it’s all thanks to a very small change.
Single-use plastic bag consumption has plummeted by more than 85% following the
introduction of the 5p/bag charge last October, early figures suggest.
Single-use plastic
bags are handy if you’re a customer, but they’re an environmental nightmare for
the planet. In an attempt to reduce the number of such bags that shops provide
their customers with, England introduced a modest 5p charge per bag last
October. It was the last part of the UK to adopt the tax on plastic bags, after
it was successfully implemented in Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland.
This little tax has
had an enormous effect: the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs
(Defra) reported that the number of plastic bags handed out by supermarkets
dropped from the 7bn in the year before the tax to only 500m in the six months
after it. The charge also raised enough cash for retailers to donate more than
£29m towards causes including charities and community groups, Defra added.