New survey of Africa’s elephants reveals catastrophic declines

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Africa’s elephant population has declined by 110,000 in the last 10 years, mainly due to poaching according to a new report presented by the African Elephant Specialist Group.

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Africa’s elephant population has declined by 110,000 in the last 10 years, mainly due to poaching according to a new report presented by the African Elephant Specialist Group.

Africa now only has 415,000 elephants based on population estimates from a wide range of sources – including data from the pan-African survey on savanna elephants by the Great Elephant Census.

Eastern Africa has experienced an almost 50% elephant population reduction, largely attributed to drastic losses in northern Mozambique and Tanzania’s elephant populations, while Central Africa’s forest elephant population has been very badly affected by poaching for ivory since the 1990s. West Africa’s elephant populations are now mostly small, fragmented and isolated with a staggering 12 populations reported as lost since 2006.

The report noted that while poaching has not had the same impact in southern Africa as in other areas, the region is now also facing the emergence of a growing poaching threat. Poaching hotspots have been observed in northern Zimbabwe and southern Angola, which has been the hardest hit in the region. The latter country had an entire elephant population lost in one area.

“It is clear from these recent reports that we are in the midst of an Africa-wide poaching crisis that is decimating its elephants,” says Keith Lindsay, an ecologist with the Amboseli Trust for Elephants. “Only a total international ban and a closure of domestic markets will put an end to the poaching crisis.”

A total of 183 countries has gathered in Johannesburg to deliberate on the fate of Africa’s elephants.



“We hope that the world will support the proposal put forward at the conference by twenty nine African countries, known as the African Elephant Coalition, which calls for a global ban on all ivory sales,” says Azizou El Hadj Issa, Chairman of the Council of Elders for the AEC.

WHAT TO TAKE AWAY FROM THIS ARTICLE:

  • “We hope that the world will support the proposal put forward at the conference by twenty nine African countries, known as the African Elephant Coalition, which calls for a global ban on all ivory sales,” says Azizou El Hadj Issa, Chairman of the Council of Elders for the AEC.
  • The report noted that while poaching has not had the same impact in southern Africa as in other areas, the region is now also facing the emergence of a growing poaching threat.
  • Eastern Africa has experienced an almost 50% elephant population reduction, largely attributed to drastic losses in northern Mozambique and Tanzania's elephant populations, while Central Africa's forest elephant population has been very badly affected by poaching for ivory since the 1990s.

About the author

Juergen T Steinmetz

Juergen Thomas Steinmetz has continuously worked in the travel and tourism industry since he was a teenager in Germany (1977).
He founded eTurboNews in 1999 as the first online newsletter for the global travel tourism industry.

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