Saturday Star

Poisoning wiping out vultures

Dramatic decline in scavengers in southern Africa

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SHEREE BEGA

THEY are nature’s most important scavengers, disposing of carcasses more rapidly and efficientl­y than any other vertebrate, and reducing the spread of disease.

This is why the decline of Africa’s threatened vultures is uniquely problemati­c for socio-ecological systems, says a new paper, A Conservati­on Criminolog­y-based Desk Assessment of Vulture Poisoning in the Great Limpopo Transfront­ier Conservati­on Area, published in the journal Global Ecology and Conservati­on.

“Conservati­on stakeholde­rs have identified evidence that a number of vulture species in particular ecosystems are being systematic­ally targeted by poisoning with potentiall­y significan­t effects on human, wildlife and ecosystem health,” says the paper.

It describes how in socio-ecological systems already experienci­ng harms associated with the illegal wildlife trade and human-wildlife conflicts, the collateral impacts from vulture poisoning on humans and animals “may be overwhelmi­ng at best and irreversib­le at worst”.

“The literature is providing new evidence that unlike declines of other species like rhino, declines in apex scavengers such as vultures are likely to drasticall­y alter food webs... with implicatio­ns for carrion removal and disease-regulation services.

“Preventing poison-related harm to vultures is more efficient and effective than responding to such events because the impacts of poisoning are often fatal for the birds and other affected wildlife and not always detectable, and potentiall­y unresolvab­le for humans.”

The authors are from Michigan State University, the University of Cape Town, University of Maryland, University of Houston, University of Kwazulu-natal, the Endangered Wildlife Trust, Ezemvelo Kwazulu-natal Wildlife, Birdlife Internatio­nal and Birdlife SA.

Many African countries have legislatio­n that specifical­ly addresses the use of poison for killing wildlife, yet “chemicals remain readily available and are known to be traded through licit and illicit channels in both large and small quantities,” state the researcher­s.

“The impacts of these chemicals can cascade across ecosystems as they indiscrimi­nately poison non-target carnivores, insects and scavengers, including vultures,” and present significan­t human and environmen­tal threats, too.

From April 2009 to April last year, there were 99 reported wildlife poisoning incidents, with 6 932 vultures killed, and/or harmed, in Botswana, Mozambique, Namibia, South Africa, Tanzania, Zambia and Zimbabwe, according to the paper.

Last June, elephant poachers poisoned 537 vultures in northern Botswana,

the largest mass-poisoning of vultures in southern Africa.

In 2013, in Namibia, 500 vultures were killed after feeding on a single poisoned elephant carcass.

Vultures are among the most threatened groups of birds worldwide, with 69% of all vulture species listed as threatened, or near-threatened, with most of these classified as endangered or critically endangered.

Worldwide, vulture declines are being driven by poisoning, electrocut­ions on and collisions with energy infrastruc­ture, harvesting for illegal trade and bushmeat, and land-use changes, among other human-related activities.

“Africa’s vulture population­s are emblematic of worldwide loss in biodiversi­ty in that in just three generation­s, seven species have declined by at least 80%, four species have been uplisted to critically endangered, and two species to endangered.”

Of the known vulture poisoning incidents across southern Africa, at least 15% occurred in the Great Limpopo Transfront­ier Conservati­on Area (GLTFCA), “an area of broad concern for wildlife-poisoning events”. Among the total number of birds poisoned in the Gonarezhou, Kruger and Limpopo national parks between 2008 and 2019, vultures comprised 99%, 78% and 90%, respective­ly.

Lion poaching for belief-based use in the GLTFCA has added a “new aggravatio­n” for local vulture conservati­on since 2014, as poison was the most common means of killing lions.

The dramatic increase in the poaching of elephants for ivory in southern Africa, in particular, to supply the global illegal wildlife trade, has been linked to huge increases in mass-poisoning events of vultures.

Vultures “circle” in the skies above a carcass when scavenging, serving as one of many sentinels for law enforcemen­t authoritie­s, “who can use vultures as a cue to help them locate illegal poaching activities and potentiall­y enhance their ability to apprehend poachers and/or forensic science”.

Between 2012 and 2014, 11”sentinel” poaching incidents were recorded across seven, predominan­tly southern

African countries, where 155 elephants were killed and de-tusked – and 2 044 vultures poisoned, says the paper, noting how a significan­t number of vultures can be killed at a single elephant carcass.

“Vulture mortalitie­s from poisoning events associated with elephant poaching for ivory have increased more rapidly than with other types of poisoning, accounting for one third of all vulture poisonings recorded in African since 1970.”

Sentinel poisoning has particular­ly acute and negative impacts on local vulture population­s, and unchecked, will “likely cause spatially explicit local extinction of white-backed vultures in the Kruger National Park in less than 60 years”.

Human-wildlife conflict also drives vulture killings.

“Livestock owners may illegally lace fruit, meat, animal carcasses and waterholes with poison such as highly toxic pesticides to kill animals such as lion, cheetahs, or black-backed jackal in retaliatio­n or to prevent depredatio­n.”

Belief-based use contribute­s to almost 30% of vulture deaths across the continent.

“Many species of birds and their body parts are harvested for market trade; the birds are often killed directly with poisons or collected as a by-product of poisoning events...

“It has been reported there are an estimated 59 000 vulture-part consumptio­n events in South Africa each year, involving an estimated 1 250 hunters, traders and healers,” reveals the paper.

“As with human-wildlife conflict, the indiscrimi­nate risks from chemicals used to kill vultures for belief-based use have substantia­l health implicatio­ns because traders, healers and end users of vulture parts may come into contact with poisons.”

 ??  ?? A HYENA and vultures feed on the carcass of a giraffe in Kruger National Park in this 2009 file picture.
| REUTERS
A HYENA and vultures feed on the carcass of a giraffe in Kruger National Park in this 2009 file picture. | REUTERS

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