IAPF Team

Nikki Brown

Nicky, a horticulturist from the UK, has recently joined the IAPF team. Based at DETE in Hwange National Park she brings a wealth of knowledge to Zimbabwe. Nikki will be ...

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Supporters

Climbing Everest For IAPF

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In October this year Cheryl McMurray of England will make her way towards the top of the world as she raises funds and awareness for the IAPF. Her journey will ...

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IVORY
Ivory poaching is no longer an opportunistic crime carried out by individuals. It is now carried out by highly sophisticated, heavily armed units of poachers who are wreaking havoc amongst the elephant and rhino populations of Africa. These units are generally tasked by offshore organized crime syndicates to pursue ivory. They operate with vehicles, high powered rifles, radios and in some cases helicopters, using military style tactics to wipe out their targets. Killing for tusks is a particularly gruesome trade. Elephants are highly intelligent animals whose sophisticated social ties are exploited by poachers. They will often shoot young elephants to draw in a grieving parent. Anti poaching rangers continue to lose their lives in the ongoing battle that rages against such outfits and tactics.

It is estimated that up to 37,000 African elephants are slaughtered every year for their ivory. 70 per cent of this ivory is bound for Asia where it is used for carvings and signature stamps called Hankos. The decision in 2008 to allow a one-off sale of 109 tonnes of ivory after a 20 year international ban has reinvigorated the black market. It was originally thought that the billions of dollars in revenue generated by ivory sales could help boost the economies of these developing nations in Africa, and even be used to fund conservation efforts for wildlife in those areas. With that much money easily in reach, it’s understandable why the sales, under CITES (Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species) supervision, were permitted. Yet many voiced their concerns that opening up the market – even a legal one – would ignite the illegal trade, along with the violence, conflict, and animal suffering associated with the black market. And, as we now know, this is exactly what happened. Ivory poaching is now taking place on an unprecedented rate not seen since the 1980’s, referred to as the 'Ivory Holocaust'.
 
The Big Fella’s Future
At the current rate, elephants are due for extinction by 2025. The public outcry that led to the ivory ban in 1989 is absent today. This is mainly due to the international community being unaware of the elephants struggle. Reports from several sources stating that African elephants had been culled due to overpopulation have misled the western community to believe that elephant numbers are up. These few cases are isolated to fenced enclosures and are in fact contrary to what is happening across sub Saharan Africa.
 
Targeting Ivory
Common belief that large shipments of seized ivory were made up of small collections from a number of different sources across a large area. DNA sampling which links the ivory to a ‘dung’ database reveals that most shipments are a collection of tusks from a single area. What this means is that orders for ivory are placed and then poachers assault the same area over and over again until the quota has been fulfilled. This causes major devastation to local populations and ecosystems. It also suggests that only a handful of syndicates are responsible for ordering much of Africa’s elephant poaching. Recent seizures of large ivory hauls in Hong Kong, Vietnam, the Philippines, Taiwan, and Japan back opinions that last years sale of ivory to the East has whet their appetite for the pearly treasure. Add to this the regions recent economic growth and there is a very clear and present danger to the future of the elephant. 
 

Projects

IAPF Ultra-Light Aircraft – The Eye in the Sky

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The IAPF Ultra-Light aircraft is now being used for conservation efforts in and around Victoria ...

Current Projects | Wednesday, 1 September 2010

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Rhino poaching now stands at a 15-year high, threatening to undermine decades of dedicated work by conservationists.

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