/ Wildlife

Hundreds Of Endangered Gibbon Discovered In Vietnam

Published July 24, 2011 in Love For Earthlings |
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Research scientists recently discovered that over two-thirds of the world’s population of the critically-endangered northern white-cheeked crested gibbon are currently living in Vietnam.

Scientists working with Conservation International (CI) used auditory surveying, a technique which uses the species’ loud morning calls for identification, to confirm a population of 455 animals, making it an immediate target for conservation action for the species globally.

According to CI, gibbons are territorial and communicate their boundaries with loud, elaborate and prolonged vocalizations. By recording these songs, data was gathered on the gibbon groups in the surveyed area and used to determine group numbers across the park. This relict population was discovered in remote, dense forest, at high altitudes on the Vietnam-Laos border, where they have been isolated from human populations. This latest discovery gives great hope for the future of this beautiful and unique primate.

“All of the world’s 25 different gibbons are threatened, and none more so than the Indochinese crested gibbons, eight of which, including the northern white-cheeked gibbon, are now on the brink of extinction,” said Dr. Russell A. Mittermeier, Chair of the IUCN/SSC Primate Specialist Group and President of Conservation International. ”This is an extraordinarily significant find, and underscores the immense importance of protected areas in providing the last refuges for the region’s decimated wildlife.”


Shark Fishing Banned in the Bahamas

Published July 15, 2011 in Love For Earthlings |
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An amendment to an important fisheries law was made recently to ban all commercial shark fishing in the Bahamas. Sharks in 518,000 square kilometres of Bahamian waters will be protected from commercial fishing boats from now on.

Sharks in the Bahamas are actually in fairly good health, relative to other areas where they are being depleted rapidly due to the huge demand for shark fin soup. Shark-related tourism has generated about $976 million for the Bahamian economy over the last twenty years, it was estimated by the Bahamas Diving Association.

In 2010 about five million tourists visited the country. (The total population is just 350,000. ) Tourism generates nearly of the country’s entire yearly GDP. Additionally about half of the country’s workers directly or indirectly depend on tourism for their income.

“This is in keeping with the government’s commitment to pursue appropriate conservation measures and strategies in order to safeguard marine and terrestrial environment,” said a Bahamian official. (Source: Nassau Guardian) For the last seventeen years, a ban has been in effect on longline fishing, which protected large fish including sharks but not sharks specifically.

A study of open ocean sharks found nearly a third of them face extinction due to overfishing. “Our report documents serious overfishing of these species, in national and international waters, and demonstrates a clear need for immediate action on a global scale, said a shark conservation researcher. (Source: IUCN)

Shark fin soup, just one Chinese dish, is killing an enormous number of sharks. One estimate says Hong Kong imports 10 million kilos of shark fin each year from as many as 87 countries.

One of the justifications for killing many sharks is the false notion they are out-of-control human killers, but the truth is they are not at all. A different shark study in 2009 found only five humans were killed by sharks worldwide, and four of those were surfers in South Africa where there are great white sharks. When people choose to surf where it is known there are great white sharks they are knowingly risking their lives by being in the shark’s territory.