The Herald (South Africa)

Hippos join list of African wildlife under threat

- Dave Chambers

HIPPOS are the latest African animals under threat from the wildlife trade.

Rising demand for hippo teeth‚ most of which pass through Hong Kong‚ has coincided with a slump in their numbers estimated at between 7% and 20% in the last decade.

Hippo ivory is carved into ornaments in Asia‚ and since Convention on Internatio­nal Trade in Endangered Species (Cites) monitoring began in 1975‚ more than 770 tons of teeth have been sold‚ 90% of it to Hong Kong.

But a new study by the biological sciences school at the University of Hong Kong has revealed a massive gap between trade volumes declared by importers and exporters‚ warning that this could threaten hippos’ survival.

“If authoritie­s do not more diligently monitor the internatio­nal trade in threatened species‚ those species could be exposed to unmanageab­le exploitati­on levels‚ which could lead to extinction‚” study leader Alexandra Andersson wrote in the African Journal of Ecology.

The main exporters of hippo teeth are Uganda and Tanzania. Since Tanzania joined Cites in 1980‚ records show that Hong Kong has received 3 176kg more hippo teeth than declared exported by Tanzania.

In the 19 hippo teeth trade transactio­ns between Hong Kong and Uganda since the Kampala government signed up to Cites in 1991‚ Hong Kong received more than 14 tons less hippo teeth than declared exported by Uganda. This represents more than 2 700 hippos.

After the population decline in the last decade‚ the Internatio­nal Union for the Conservati­on of Nature estimates a further 30% decrease in hippos the next 30 years.

At that rate‚ they will disappear within a century. National Geographic reported in December that Uganda banned trade in hippo teeth in 2014‚ but it had since gone undergroun­d – and Zambia‚ Zimbabwe and Malawi had moved in to fill the gap.

Hong Kong trader Patrick Leung told National Geographic his hippo ivory carvings sold for between $50 and $500 (R690 and R6 900).

Many of his customers were Europeans who “like carved animals and people – samurai warriors”.

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