The
giant panda is no longer an endangered species
Thanks to an increase
in available habitat, the population of the giant panda rose 17% from 2004 to
2014, leading the IUCN to downgrade it from endangered to vulnerable.
A nationwide census
in 2014 found 1,864 giant pandas in the wild in China, up from 1,596 in 2004, the IUCN said in its
report on the animal.
Revered in Chinese culture, the
giant panda was once widespread throughout southern China.
Since the 1970s, it has been the
focus of one of the most intensive, high-profile campaigns to recover an
endangered species, after a census by the Chinese government found around 2,459
pandas in the world --
proof of its precarious position, according to the World Wildlife Fund.
China banned trading
panda skins in 1981, and the enactment of the 1988 Wildlife Protection Law
banned poaching and conferred the highest protected status to the animal. The
creation of a panda reserve system in 1992 increased available habitats; today,
there are 67 reserves in the country that protect 67% of the population and nearly
1.4 million hectares of habitat.
Meanwhile,
partnerships between the Chinese government and international conservation
nongovernmental organizations and zoos have spread research, conservation and
breeding efforts. Zoo Atlanta announced Saturday that 19-year-old Lun Lun,
originally from China's Chengdu Research Base of Giant Panda Breeding, had given
birth to twins.
The improved status
confirms that the Chinese government's reforestation and forest protection
efforts are working, the IUCN said. But climate change still threatens to
eliminate more than 35% of the panda's bamboo habitat in the next 80 years;
hence the "vulnerable" designation, which means it's still at risk of
extinction.
"The recovery of
the panda shows that when science, political will and engagement of local
communities come together, we can save wildlife and also improve
biodiversity," said WWF Director General Marco Lambertini.
Now, the bad news:
Eastern gorillas
populate the mountainous forests of eastern Democratic Republic of Congo,
northwest Rwanda and southwest Uganda, making them another victim of the
region's civil wars.
Hunting of eastern
gorillas, fueled by the spread of firearms, has led to a population decline of
more than 70% in the past 20
years for the world's
largest living primate, the IUCN said.
The eastern gorilla
population, made up of two subspecies, is estimated to be fewer than 5,000,
bumping it from endangered to critically endangered.
One of those
subspecies, Grauer's gorilla, lost 77% of its population since 1994, declining
from 16,900 individuals to just 3,800 in 2015, the IUCN said. The second
subspecies, the mountain gorilla, is faring better, increasing its number to
around 880 individuals, reversing a decline that began in 1996.
The change in status
means four of six great apes are critically endangered, the eastern gorilla,
western gorilla, Bornean orangutan and Sumatran orangutan. The chimpanzee and
bonobo are considered endangered.
In the past 20 years,
Grauer's gorillas have been severely affected by human activities, the victim
of poaching for bushmeat for those working in mining camps and for commercial
trade, the IUCN said.
"This illegal
hunting has been facilitated by a proliferation of firearms resulting from
widespread insecurity in the region," said the IUCN in a report on the
animal. "This rate of population
loss is almost three times above that which qualifies a species as critically
endangered."
Additional threats
include habitat loss and degradation through agricultural and pastoral
activities in DRC, along with extraction of resources, which puts added stress
on natural habitats.
Illegal mining has
decimated the lowlands of Kahuzi-Biega National Park, a Grauer's gorilla
habitat. Destruction of forest for timber, charcoal production and agriculture
continues to threaten isolated gorilla populations in North Kivu and the
Itombwe Massif.
FROM THE DESK OF
ANIMAL RIGHTS WRITERS ASSOCIATION OF NIGERIA.
http://edition.cnn.com/2016/09/04/world/giant-panda-endangered-downgrade-gorillas-decline/index.html
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