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FLORA AND FAUNA
Mass killing of Cameroon elephants alarms UN agency
by Staff Writers
Geneva (AFP) Feb 28, 2012


The UN watchdog into the illegal wildlife trade on Tuesday voiced "grave concern" at a spike in African elephant poaching after nearly 450 of the animals were killed in Cameroon.

The head of the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora (CITES), John Scanlon, pointed at recent reports of mass poaching for ivory in Cameroon's Bouba Ndjida National Park.

"This most recent incident of poaching elephants is on a massive scale," said Scanlon. "It reflects a new trend we are detecting across many range states, where well-armed poachers with sophisticated weapons decimate elephant populations, often with impunity."

CITES is offering African governments support to hunt down the criminals and to locate and seize the poached ivory. Potential transit and destination countries had been urged to remain extremely vigilant and to cooperate.

The CITES programme on elephants revealed increasing levels of poaching in 2011.

"This spike in elephant poaching is of grave concern not only to Cameroon, a member state to CITES, but to all 38 range states of the African elephant," said Scanlon.

CITES said elephants have been slaughtered by groups from Chad and the Sudan in recent weeks, taking advantage of the dry season.

The poached ivory is believed to be traded for money, weapons and munition, fueling conflicts in neighbouring countries.

The UN agency said it will contact the ministers responsible for forests and wildlife from Cameroon, Chad, the Central African Republic, the Democratic Republic of the Congo and Sudan to offer anti-poaching support.

Scanlon has designated Ben Janse Van Rensburg, a senior CITES security official with experience in fighting poaching, to coordinate support in response to the major elephant slaughters.

Van Rensburg is working with other international agencies including the International Consortium on Combating Wildlife Crime, Interpol, the World Customs Organization, the UN Office on Drugs and Crime and the World Bank.

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Indonesia releases orangutans into the wild
Jakarta (AFP) Feb 28, 2012 - Four orangutans were released into the wild on Indonesia's Borneo island on Tuesday, an official said, as the country ramps up efforts to protect the animals from extinction.

They were the first among 40 orangutans planned to be released by the end of the year, Mega Hariyanto, the forestry ministry's conservation chief for Central Kalimantan province, told AFP.

"The orangutans were flown from the rehabilitation centre to a town near the Bukit Batikap forest on Monday. A team of vets took them to the forest this morning by helicopter," he said.

The release was a collaborative effort between the Forestry Ministry and non-profit organisation Borneo Orangutan Survival (BOS) Foundation, Hariyanto said.

"There are still more than 600 individual orangutans at the Central Kalimantan Orangutan Reintroduction Project who are waiting to be released back to their natural habitat," the organisation said in a press statement.

A dozen more orangutans are expected to be set free by end of next month, it added.

Experts say there are about 50,000 to 60,000 orangutans left in the wild, 80 percent of them in Indonesia and the rest in Malaysia.

They are faced with extinction from poaching and the rapid destruction of their forest habitat, driven largely by palm oil and paper plantations.

Conservationists in the region have been raising awareness about the plight of the endangered primates in various ways.

"Born to be Wild", a documentary by Warner Bros and IMAX which has been screening worldwide since last year, shows primate expert and Orangutan Foundation International founder Birute Mary Galdikas rescue, rehabilitate and return orphaned orangutans into the wild.

The film's producers last week screened the film in the jungle where, according to the crew, at least four orangutans watched themselves on screen.

"Their reaction was great. Orangutans have short attention span and it is incredible to have them sit 10 to 15 minutes to watch the movie," crew member Frederick Galdikas said.



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FLORA AND FAUNA
Scientists prove Turing's tiger stripe theory
London UK (SPX) Feb 27, 2012
Researchers from King's College London have provided the first experimental evidence confirming a great British mathematician's theory of how biological patterns such as tiger stripes or leopard spots are formed. The study, funded by the Medical Research Council and to be published online in Nature Genetics, not only demonstrates a mechanism which is likely to be widely relevant in vertebr ... read more


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