By Libby Leyden-Sussler Their eyes glimmer in the sweltering - TopicsExpress



          

By Libby Leyden-Sussler Their eyes glimmer in the sweltering sun. Heads hung low, they stumble across the barren grassland timid with hesitation. A clean cut has left a jarring stub on the snout of each of their long faces. These majestic black rhinos from South Africa, Bonnie and Clyde, are two of the few lucky survivors from what has now become another global issue—poaching. A solution to the crisis may be what some conservationists have been heavily resisting: legalizing the trade on rhino horn. While controversial, it may be what ends up saving the species that has been hovering on the brink of extinction. Poachers are after the rhino horn, viewed by many as the animal’s symbol of strength, to meet increasing demand from Asian markets. The demand is fueled by a belief that it holds medicinal significance, such as curing cancer and warding off headaches. Major studies prove otherwise. In fact, rhino horn is essentially comprised of the same material found in human hair and nails—keratin. Unless the international community takes a stand on poaching, the rhino population will continue to decline at an alarming rate. In 2007, South Africa only had 13 rhinos poached, but by the end of 2013 that number had leapt to 1,000—a 95 percent increase in under six years. If the trend continues, the rhino species will be extinct by as early as 2026. Since 1976, international trade of all rhino products has been banned under the United Nations Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species (CITES). Undercover surveys by organizations such as TRAFFIC reveal that rhino horn prices are now fetching the equivalent to their weight in gold. A single rhino horn is now worth around $65,000 per kg on the black market, up from $4,700 in 1993. This has made the business of poaching rhinos a lucrative endeavor, attracting terrorist groups from across globe as it supplies a heavy demand from China and Vietnam—currently the two largest nations with a demand for rhino horn. “The global ban on rhinoceros products has clearly failed, and legal controls could dissuade the lethal black market poaching that endangers the animals,” says Duan Biggs, a research fellow at the Centre of Excellence for Environmental Decisions at the University of Queensland. “As committed environmentalists, we don’t like the idea of a legal trade any more than the average member of the concerned public. But we can see that something radically different needs to be done to conserve Africa’s rhino.” Rhinos can grow about 0.9 kg of horn each year, and the risks to the animal from today’s best-practice horn harvesting techniques are minimal. Biggs explains that each legal horn could carry a traceable transponder and have a recorded DNA signature, which would allow tracking of the precious cargo from South Africa to Vietnam and China. “There is always going to be poaching. But legalization of the trade will potentially be what aids relief to the crisis,” says Arno Smit, head game reserve manager at Botlierskop in South Africa’s Garden route. “Ultimately someone needs to make a decision because what has been in place thus far is not working. The ban is clearly not working.” “As the ban remains in place currently, it artificially restricts supply in the face of this demand growth, which pushed up the price for horn and the incentives for poachers,” explains Biggs. Horn sold through a central selling organization would attract buyers because it would be legal, cheaper than on the black market, and safer and easier to obtain. There was an opportunity to start serious discussions about establishing a legal trade at the 16th CITES Conference of the Parties (COP-16) in Bangkok in March 2013, but no formal proposal was presented.
Posted on: Wed, 29 Jan 2014 07:19:40 +0000

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