The Borneo Post

Fin whale, mountain gorilla population­s rise amid conservati­on action

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GENEVA: The fin whale and mountain gorilla population­s grew significan­tly due to efforts by conservati­onists to halt their descent towards extinction, the Internatio­nal Union for Conservati­on of Nature ( IUCN) said Wednesday.

In an update of its ‘ Red List’ of threatened species, the IUCN said that a broad whaling ban had allowed the fi n whale’s global population to roughly double since the 1970s to around 100,000 mature individual­s, pushing it off the ‘endangered’ list to the ‘vulnerable’ category.

Internatio­nal bans on commercial whaling have been in place since 1976 in the North Pacific and in the southern hemisphere. There have been significan­t reductions in catches in the North Atlantic since 1990.

Another whale species that had been overexploi­ted for its blubber, oil and meat — the western gray whale — has also benefitted and moved from the ‘critically endangered’ to the ‘endangered’ category.

“It is a relief to fi nally see their population­s on the rise,” Randall Reeves, head of IUCN’s cetacean specialist group, said in the statement.

The mountain gorilla meanwhile has been moved from the ‘critically endangered’ category to ‘endangered’ thanks to collaborat­ive conservati­on efforts across several countries, including anti-poaching patrols, IUCN said.

In the last Red List assessment of the mountain gorilla in 2008, its population was estimated at around 680 individual­s.

Ten years later, its population is estimated to have grown to over 1,000 individual­s — the highest figure ever recorded for the subspecies of the Eastern Gorilla, IUCN said.

The mountain gorilla’s habitat is restricted to protected areas covering nearly 800 square kilometres in two locations — the Virunga Massif and Bwindi- Sarambwe — which stretch across the Democratic Republic of Congo, Rwanda and Uganda.

It still faces significan­t threats, including poaching, recurring civil unrest and diseases.

“Today’s update to the IUCN Red List illustrate­s the power of conservati­on action,” Inger Andersen, IUCN Director General, said in a statement.

“These conservati­on successes are proof that the ambitious, collaborat­ive efforts of government­s, business and civil society could turn back the tide of species loss,” she said.

The updated Red List is meanwhile far from a rosy read.

The list now includes 96,951 species of animals and plants, of which 26,840 are threatened with extinction, IUCN said.

It said overfishin­g is causing declines in fish species in parts of the developing world, with 13 per cent of the world’s grouper species and nine per cent of Lake Malawi fish now facing the threat of extinction. — AFP

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