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Elephants hunted, dying off, study says

Lure of lucrative ivory trade attracts desperate poachers

- By Kevin Sieff The Washington Post

NAIROBI — Africa’s elephant population has plunged faster than almost anyone predicted, raising startling questions about the failure to protect one of the world’s largest mammals.

There are now only 352,271savanna elephants in nearly all of sub-Saharan Africa, according to Elephants Without Borders, a research organizati­on that completed an18-country census.

Between 2007 and 2014, the elephant population declined by at least 30 percent, or 144,000 elephants, the study found.

Previous estimates had suggested that the population was higher, making the results of the new study, called the Great Elephant Census, a devastatin­g revelation.

“These dramatic declines in elephant population­s are almost certainly due to poaching for ivory,” the study said.

The researcher­s delivered their findings after years of travel across Africa in helicopter­s and bush planes, spending 10,000 hours in the air. National Geographic called the study “the largest wildlife census in history.”

Some of the countries included, such as Angola, had never before been surveyed.

“If we can’t save the African elephant, what is the hope of conserving the rest of Africa’s wildlife?” said Mike Chase, the principal investigat­or in the census and founder of Elephants Without Borders.

The population of savanna elephants declined dramatical­ly as their land was destroyed. Their range “shrank from three million square miles in 1979 to over one million square miles in 2007,” according to the

World Wildlife Fund.

In recent decades, poaching has added a devastatin­g new threat.

Most of the ivory taken from elephants ends up in Asia, where it fetches as much as $1,000 per pound and is used in unproven medicinal treatments.

As the Great Elephant Census researcher­s flew over much of Africa, they repeatedly saw the detritus of the poachers’ trade — large elephant carcasses left to rot in the sun.

Some countries were hit harder than others. In Cameroon, researcher­s found nearly as many dead elephants as live ones.

Earlier this year, Kenya set fire to 105 tons of ivory, an attempt to prove, in the words of President Uhuru Kenyatta, that “for us, ivory is worthless unless it is on our elephants.”

The United States recently announced a near-total ban on the ivory trade.

But for all the attention that poaching — and the subsequent decline in elephants — has received, there’s no sign that it will stop anytime soon. On much of the continent, desperatel­y poor poachers are paid far more than they would earn otherwise to target elephant sand rhinos. If they are caught, which is relatively rare, they often serve short jail sentences.

“These dramatic declines in elephant population­s are almost certainly due to poaching for ivory.” Great Elephant Census

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