Many threatened and endangered animal populations across the globe have
the media and public attention that thinning giraffe herds just cannot seem to
get.
by John
Tyburski
Copyright © Daily
Digest News, KPR Media, LLC. All rights reserved.
It is not
as if they are subtle in appearance or too small to notice. Giraffes, however,
are having a tough time with two tasks: maintaining their numbers and garnering
the attention of wildlife advocates. As a result, giraffe populations in Africa
are quietly slipping into oblivion in what one expert calls a “silent
extinction.”
Julian
Fennessy of Giraffe Conservation Research in Nambia says that the upcoming
giraffe population assessments due in early 2015 will reveal a 40 percent
reduction in population over the last 15 years. There were approximately
140,000 of the long-necked spotted creatures at the beginning of the 21st century,
but now only about 80,000 are around today.
Giraffes
reside primarily on private and communal lands and national parks in 21 African
nations. Of nine subspecies, 2 are on the International Union for the
Conservation of Nature’s Red List of endangered species. Experts cite loss of
habitat as the primary determinant in declining giraffe numbers as the animals
are driven out by agricultural expansion.
Hunting
and poaching also contributes to shrinking numbers. Both activities are on the
rise in Tanzania and a few other countries where inaccurate belief that eating
giraffe meat is a certain cure for HIV/AIDS prevails.
Ironically,
it is the high visibility and prevalence of giraffes in zoos and print media
that accounts for the mysterious lack in concern about their numbers in the
wild. A false impression that giraffes are doing just fine is reinforced by
images of the beasts everywhere and their nearly guaranteed presence at most
zoos. Conservationists hope to harness this visibility with the message that rampant
commercialization is destroying these majestic creatures and that they need
immediate international attention.
The news
is not all bad, fortunately. In Niger, the West African giraffe population has
actually increased to roughly 400, marking a dramatic rebound from just 50 two
decades ago.
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