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 ...

Read more

Supporters

Norway to Cape Town For THE IAPF

News image

In June this year Robbie Mulholland of Cape Town will set out solo on his motorbike on a 30,000km journey from Norway to Cape Town. This extraordinary adventure will see ...

Read more

change
SNARING
In terms of poaching, snares have become public enemy number one across much of sub Saharan Africa.  Criminals indiscriminately lay what essentially becomes a minefield for wildlife. Copper or steel wire is generally used and coiled around in a circle to become up to six strands thick. They are then secured over game tracks and fastened to the base of a tree. Targeted areas are usually littered with snares that are then checked at a later time for any trapped wildlife.
 
How a Snare Works
When animals walk through the snare they become entangled in the wire which then tightens as the animal struggles to free itself. Quite often the snare tightens around the neck of an animal and a slow and agonizing death lies ahead. It often takes days for the animal to die in this fashion as the wire gradually works its way deeper and deeper. Many times however the animal will avoid getting the snare caught around its neck, only to have it tighten around their leg. When this happens the snare works its way towards the bone as the animal struggles to get free. If not found it will slowly perish from dehydration or be eaten by other wildlife.
 
Wasting Away
Snares are indiscriminate in that do not choose a particular specie. A snare laid for a buffalo can just as easily trap a wild dog or an elephant. Around 70 per cent of animals that are trapped in snares are never actually found or recovered by the poachers that trapped them. This indiscriminate waste rips through wildlife populations.
 
Snares are not isolated to Africa. They remain a huge problem across many parts of Asia where poachers are targeting species such as tiger for medicinal purposes, as well as other animals for the bush meat trade.
 

Projects

Operation Black Rhino - Hwange National Park: Sinamatella

News image

The IAPF is now making preparations to tackle our most challenging task to date. With ...

Current Projects | Wednesday, 14 April 2010

Read more

Twitter


twitter Follow us on Twitter
facebook Join the IAPF on Facebook

Subscribe

IAPF Newsletter


Receive HTML?

Project Pics

facts

"A China ivory trade report by the International Fund for Animal Welfare (IFAW) found unwillingness among Chinese citizens, who make up 20% of the global population, to comply with the ivory control system - and a desire for “affordable” ivory.Whilst 14.5 percent of Chinese polled were already ivory consumers, 75.7 percent of Chinese polled would willingly violate laws to obtain ivory at a cheaper price."

Vote!

Are the images on this website too graphic?
 
videos
  • Video 1
  • Video 2
  • Video 3
  • Video 4