Subscribe free to our newsletters via your
. Earth Science News .




FLORA AND FAUNA
Dubai seizes 259 smuggled African ivory tusks
by Staff Writers
Cape Town (AFP) May 21, 2013


A shipment of 259 elephant tusks smuggled out of Africa has been seized in the United Arab Emirates, the International Wildlife Fund for Animal Welfare said Tuesday.

The tusks were discovered at a Dubai port in a container shipped from Mombasa, Kenya labelled as wooden furniture.

Demand for ivory in east Asia has prompted a surge in poaching in recent years, threatening the existence of animal populations.

Elephant herds in Central Africa, Kenya, Tanzania, Mozambique and South Africa have all been hit.

"It seems to have been an increasing trend over the last couple of years," said Jason Bell, head of the wildlife group's elephant programme.

The latest seizure took place on May 1 but was only reported now.

It is believed to be the biggest seizure of illegal ivory in the UAE.

"This seizure is yet another distressing indictment of East Africa, which is now recognised as a clearing house for the illegal ivory trade," said James Isiche, the fund's regional director for eastern Africa.

Most ivory was headed for Asia and particularly China, the group claimed.

"The big issue is that there seems to an increasing demand for ivory in the east and mainly China and that's what really fuels the trade at the end of the day," Bell told AFP.

Princes William and Charles speak out against wildlife trade
London (AFP) May 21, 2013 - Prince William and his father Prince Charles delivered impassioned pleas on Tuesday for action against the illegal trade in wildlife which threatens some of the world's best loved animals.

Charles told a conference at St James' Palace in London that action must be taken against the poaching of elephants, rhinos and tigers for their ivory, horns and other parts to avoid the "irreversible tragedy" of their extinction.

The heir to the British throne said wildlife trafficking was "not only decimating critical endangered species, but is also a pervasive instrument in destabilising economic and political security".

He said local poachers had been replaced by increasingly sophisticated groups who would stop at nothing to win a part of a black market trade worth $10 billion a year.

"They are taking these animals, sometimes in unimaginably high numbers, using the weapons of war -- assault rifles, silencers, night vision equipment, and helicopters," he said.

He added: "As a father and a soon-to-be grandfather, I find it inconceivable that our children and grandchildren could live in a world bereft of these animals."

Charles' son William, whose wife Catherine is expecting his first child in July, also addressed the meeting of government officials, NGOs and private companies from around the world.

"I sincerely hope that my generation is not the first on this planet to consider elephants, rhinos or tigers as historical creatures -- in the same category as the Dodo."

Charles has long been a champion of conservation and is head of the British branch of global charity WWF -- a job once held by his father Prince Philip, the husband of Queen Elizabeth II.

William meanwhile is a patron of the Tusk Trust, a conservation charity, and has sought to use his charitable foundation to look at how to shape public opinion about the trade in animal parts.

"I think that the consumer deserves to know that the illegal animal parts' fashionable and luxurious image is at odds with the barbarity of how these animal parts are obtained," he said.

Elephants have long been hunted for their ivory tusks, while rhino horns are an expensive commodity in Asia, where consumers falsely believe the substance has medicinal properties.

British Environment Secretary Owen Paterson, who co-hosted Tuesday's conference with the royals, summed up the misguided value put on animal products by saying: "Rhino horn has the same medicinal value as one of my big toe nails."

.


Related Links
Darwin Today At TerraDaily.com






Comment on this article via your Facebook, Yahoo, AOL, Hotmail login.

Share this article via these popular social media networks
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit GoogleGoogle








FLORA AND FAUNA
Scientists discover oldest evidence of split between Old World monkeys and apes
Athens OH (SPX) May 22, 2013
Two fossil discoveries from the East African Rift reveal new information about the evolution of primates, according to a study published online in Nature this week led by Ohio University scientists. The team's findings document the oldest fossils of two major groups of primates: the group that today includes apes and humans (hominoids), and the group that includes Old World monkeys such as ... read more


FLORA AND FAUNA
Huge China sinkhole kills five: authorities

How should geophysics contribute to disaster planning?

Russia Boosts Emergencies Space Monitoring

Prince Harry tours hurricane-hit New Jersey

FLORA AND FAUNA
NASA Seeks High-Performance Spaceflight Computing Capabilities

SPUTNIX is granted a license for space activity

Stanford Engineers' New Metamaterial Doubles Up on Invisibility

Observation of second sound in a quantum gas

FLORA AND FAUNA
New Stanford Nanoscavengers Could Usher In Next Generation Water Purification

Hydropower frenzy threatens Carpathian mountains: WWF

NGOs denounce Malaysia hydropower meeting

Asia-Pacific leaders warn of water conflict threat

FLORA AND FAUNA
Tropical air circulation drives fall warming on Antarctic Peninsula

Research into carbon storage in Arctic tundra reveals unexpected insight into ecosystem resiliency

Shrinking glaciers behind a third of sea-level rise: study

Arctic Council admits China, six others as observers

FLORA AND FAUNA
Hong Kong hails the return of the duck

Argentine beef trade decimated by policy shifts

Keeping fruit, vegetables and cut flowers fresh longer

Danone strikes deals to meet Chinese taste for yogurt

FLORA AND FAUNA
6.0 quake off Russia's far-east Kamchatka coastline

Penn Research Helps Paint Finer Picture of Massive 1700 Earthquake

Five hurt as quake hits Algeria: medics

TD Alvin Marks Starts Of US Hurricane Season

FLORA AND FAUNA
Madagascar security forces summon political rivals

African Sahel reels from ever more frequent crises: UN

SLeone, China sign huge infrastructure deal

Residents flee after Nigeria air raids on Islamists

FLORA AND FAUNA
Brain frontal lobes not sole centre of human intelligence

Searching for Clandestine Graves with Geophysical Tools

Painless brain stimulation shown to improve mental math skills

Pet lovers take blogging to the next level




The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2014 - Space Media Network. AFP, UPI and IANS news wire stories are copyright Agence France-Presse, United Press International and Indo-Asia News Service. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space Media Network on any Web page published or hosted by Space Media Network. Privacy Statement