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World’s largest gorillas ‘one step from going extinct’

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AFP
AFP
Agence France-Presse

With just 5,000 Eastern gorillas (Gorilla beringei) left on Earth, the majestic species now faces the risk of disappearing completely, officials said at the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) global conference in Honolulu.

Four out of six of the Earth’s great apes are now critically endangered, “only one step away from going extinct,” including the Eastern Gorilla, Western Gorilla, Bornean Orangutan and Sumatran Orangutan, said the IUCN’s latest update to its Red List, the world’s most comprehensive inventory of plant and animal species.

Chimpanzees and bonobos are listed as endangered.

“To see the Eastern gorilla slide towards extinction is truly distressing,” said Inger Andersen, IUCN director general.

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War, hunting and loss of land to refugees in the past 20 years have led to a “devastating population decline of more than 70 percent,” for the Eastern gorilla, said the IUCN’s update.

One of the two subspecies of Eastern gorilla, known as Grauer’s gorilla (G. b. graueri), has drastically declined since 1994 when there were 16,900 individuals, to just 3,800 in 2015.

Even though killing these apes is against the law, hunting is their greatest threat, experts said.

The second subspecies of Eastern gorilla -– the Mountain gorilla (G. b. beringei) -– has seen a small rebound in its numbers, and totals around 880 individuals.

According to John Robinson, a primatologist and chief conservation officer at the Wildlife Conservation Society, the Rwandan genocide sparked a disastrous series of events that impacted gorillas, too.

“The genocide pushed a lot of people out of Rwanda, a lot of refugees into eastern DRC, who moved into areas which were relatively unoccupied by human beings,” he told AFP. “It was a situation that kind of unraveled,” he said.

Some people hunted gorillas for bushmeat, while activities like mining and charcoal production and human settlement also infringed on gorillas’ habitat.

“The people that moved into that part of DRC saw gorillas as a delicacy,” Robinson said. “It is such a great travesty to be losing our closest relatives on this planet.”

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Zebras, pandas

The IUCN Red List update includes 82,954 species — including both plants and animals. Almost one third — 23,928 — are threatened with extinction, it said.

There was good news for pandas, whose status improved from “endangered” to “vulnerable” due to intensive conservation efforts by China.

The Tibetan Antelope (Pantholops hodgsonii) has also improved, after protections helped it move from “endangered” to “near threatened” following a spate of commercial poaching for its valuable underfur, or shahtoosh, which is used to make shawls.

But the situation deteriorated for others, including the Plains Zebra (Equus quagga) which has been increasingly hunted for bushmeat and skins, and has moved from a species of “least concern” to “near threatened.”

“The population has reduced by 24 percent in the past 14 years from around 660,000 to a current estimate of just over 500,000 animals,” the IUCN said.

Illegal hunting and habitat loss also pushed three species of antelope found in Africa to “near threatened” status, including Bay Duiker (Cephalophus dorsalis), White-bellied Duiker (Cephalophus leucogaster) and Yellow-backed Duiker (Cephalophus silvicultor).

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Among plants, the Red List highlighted the growing extinction threat to Hawaiian plants posed by invasive species, including pigs, goats, rats, slugs and non-native plants.

Some 38 of the 415 Hawaiian plant species were listed as extinct and four other species listed as extinct in the wild, meaning they only occur in cultivation.

A full 87 percent of native Hawaiian plants are threatened with extinction, it said.

Among the new entries to the Red List is the Psychedelic Rock Gecko (Cnemaspis psychedelica), which is listed as “endangered” and known only to exist on two small offshore islands in southern Vietnam and is highly, and illegally, sought for the commercial pet trade.

“Illegal hunting and habitat loss are still major threats driving many mammal species towards extinction,” said Carlo Rondinini, mammal assessment coordinator at Sapienza University of Rome.

“We have now reassessed nearly half of all mammals. While there are some successes to celebrate, this new data must act as a beacon to guide the conservation of those species which continue to be under threat.”

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