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West African Black Rhino
Feared Extinct
The West African black rhino
appears to have become extinct, according to a leading global conservation
group. Extensive searches throughout the black rhino's last known habitat
in northern Cameroon have failed to find any rhinos or signs of their existence.
The
western black rhino sub-species, Diceros bicornis longipes, had declined
precipitously in the past 20 years largely as a result of poaching. In
2002 there were only 10 remaining. The few left were distributed over a
wide area, making breeding more difficult.
Specialists from the World
Conservation Union (IUCN) mounted 48 field missions in Cameroon, in which
they searched across 1,550 miles. "They looked for spoor [tracks], they
looked for the rhino's characteristic way of feeding which has an effect
like a pruning shear, but they didn't find anything to indicate a continued
presence in the area," Richard Emslie, scientific officer with the IUCN's
species survival commission, told the BBC.
The search missions did,
however, come across lots of evidence of poaching, There is a lucrative
black market trade in rhino horn, which is prized in Asia as an aphrodisiac.
The numbers of all types
of African rhino have plummeted over the past 150 years. Colonial hunters
picked off the distinctive herbivores as trophies. The northern white rhino
is also critically threatened as it is down to just four in its only remaining
habitat in the Democratic Republic of Congo.
The southern white rhino
reached its lowest point in 1895, with just 30 in one South African game
park. Since then captive breeding and protection measures have brought
numbers up to nearly 15,000. Groups have also been re-established in other
countries.
The black rhino's decline
came later. The continent-wide population numbered about 100,000 in 1900,
but declined to 2,400 by 1995. Intensive protection measures in southern
Africa have brought its numbers back up to about 3,600.
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About the Author
By Guardian
Unlimited © Copyright Guardian Newspapers 2006
Travel
Articles / Africa
/ Cameroon
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