Alessandra Potenza, a writer for New York Times Upfront magazine, sheds light onto the seriousness of Poachers. Poachers, also known as “Trophy Hunters”, are causing the endangered species problem to become worse, specifically African wildlife. Every year 600 lions are killed by Trophy Hunters (column in the middle of pg. 11). An example of this happening is with Cecil (a lion, also a popular tourist attraction) didn’t attack the Trophy Hunters when they shot him with a crossbow but instead ran away; the Trophy Hunters tracked him down and killed 2 days later. (Paragraph 1 and 2, pg. 10)…
The Trophy Hunting Dilemma A small herd of wild African Elephants wander upon a shallow lagoon no deeper than three feet and smaller in circumference than a standard classroom. A towering female submerges the end of it’s trunk in the water and from beneath its legs, a calf stumbles into the water. The baby elephant throws it’s trunk back flinging water onto the rest of the herd. The other members of the herd let out a high pitched trumpeting sound and wade into the shallow water.…
This paper will provide an overview of some of the available research available that will illustrate the impact elephants have on their African environment. Elephant populations in Africa steadily declined for much of the twentieth century due to habitat loss and poaching (Wittemyer…
Wild Life The elephant population has steadily declined over the decade due to the demand for ivory. However, it is not just the elephant population that is declining. In the article “World Wildlife ‘falls by 58% in 40 years’” the author, Rebecca Morelle, believes the animal population has decreased gradually over the last 40 years.…
“Where for centuries humans and elephants lived in relative peaceful coexistence, there is now hostility and violence” (Siebert 353) This change in behavior is not at all random and draws the attention from researches such as Siebert to answer why this is. The elephants have lost their habitat, food supply, water supply, and a lot of times, family, to ruthless human attacks causing the elephants to go insane. This impacts the elephant's behavior and now it becomes a more intemperate creature where lashing out and attacking humans is common behavior. “Bradshaw and several colleagues argued that today’s elephant populations are suffering from a form of chronic stress, a kind of species-wide trauma” (Siebert 354).…
However, this step to protect the elephant population soon threatened another endangered species. The elephant population has been drastically reduced by loss of habitat to cultivation and urbanization, and many have been orphaned by poachers cashing in on the illegal ivory trade. Some biologists believe that if elephant numbers continue to drop, it will soon be impossible to save the species. Elephants are amazing creatures. As well as holding the title of "largest land animal," they are also among the most intelligent.…
A wildlife conservationist once said, “Extinction is forever, endangered means we still have time.” Most poachers are after elephants’ precious ivory tusks, which are used to make statues, jewelry, and other prized objects. Conservationists are using these two devices to turn back to drone technology as well as global positioning systems (GPS) & ink injections to fight back against poachers. Poaching is a growing global concern that will continue to destroy wildlife if we do not do something about it. One way to slow down animal poaching is by creating better aerial security where wildlife lives.…
The fight to save our rhinos is getting an upgrade. The new technology, known as Rapid (Real-time Anti-Poaching Intelligence Device) is impressive. Plus, there's top-secret spy cameras involved. It's one last, drastic effort to save rhinos from extinction. "Rapid Renders Poaching a Pointless Exercise" As reported in The Independent, http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/africa/rhinos-horns-to-be-fitted-with-spy-cameras-and-alarms-to-help-catch-poachers-10400423.html endangered rhinos will have spy cams fitted on their horns to catch poachers in the act, and, ultimately, convict them.…
The women cook and clean while the men hunt. It is the woman who tell the men to catch their next meal. The men hunt every and anything for the sake of their families. The poachers are doing the same but they are doing it strictly to make a living. Between seventy-five thousand and one hundred thousand elephants have been poached in the Luangwa Valley as a whole; that's roughly one for every word in this book,” Mark explains.…
A common concern we have today is poaching. Poaching is bad and we can stop it by using surveillance, punishment, and restrictions on land. One way we can solve the poaching problem is with surveillance. If you have video footage you could catch the culprit. In the article it says you can use drones because you can’t hear them, see them, or smell them so the people who are hunting won’t know they’re being watched.…
Wildlife poaching has negative effects on local communities, wildlife population, and the ecosystem. The extinction of a species can effect a local communities tourism industry. “A community that relies on its wildlife to attract tourists is at great risk for economic hardship if the prevalence of poaching is high”(Estrada). If Poaching continues still on it can have a drastic effect on the food chain. For example, “when the North American Gray Wolf was on the brink of extinction, due to trophy hunting and poaching, the elk populations in Yellowstone National Park soared.…
Another initiative that seeks to protect Africa's elephant populations from poaching activities is the Tanzanian organization Africa's Wildlife Trust. In 1998 environmental scientists from the University of Massachusetts Amherst proposed the concept of poaching as an environmental crime, defining any activity as illegal that contravenes the laws and regulations established to protect renewable natural resources including the illegal harvest of wildlife with the intention of possessing, transporting, consuming or selling it and using its body parts. The following violations and offenses are considered acts of poaching: Sociological and criminological research on poaching indicates that in North America people poach for commercial gain, home consumption, trophies, pleasure and thrill in killing wildlife, or because they disagree with certain hunting regulations, claim a traditional right to hunt, or have negative dispositions toward legal authority. Millions of protected plants are illegally collected each year. As trophy hunting became popular, poaching activity, in particular commercial poaching, increased in the Western…
Every day tons of animals are poached all over the world, some animals left to rot in the sun. even though others might think poaching is good because it gives us resources, it is the opposite poaching damages ecosystems severely. Poaching has become a huge problem all over the world not just in the U.S. In order to stop poaching we need to be aware about the statistics, what animals are affected by poaching, and why they are being poached. There are becoming less and less of the animals that make our ecosystem steady because of poaching.…
Some people think that trophy hunting would have no effects on poaching. About thirty thousand elephants are killed every year because of poaching and the shrinking habitat for the animals in Africa according to nationalgeographic.com. Poaching happens in Africa for two reasons, first, that people want to sell the ivory collected from elephants and rhinos. The second reason people poach is to feed themselves and their families. With trophy hunting, “The client would take home the head and other desirable parts and the town that the hunter was hunting in or near would get all of the meat” nationalgeographic.com said.…
The population went from many millions to a few hundred thousand. Today, elephants are protected, but poachers still find ways to kill them for their tusks ("How Animals Become Extinct.",…