Africa
6 years ago

African elephant poaching declines, ivory seizures hit record levels

A bird flies over a family of elephants walking in the Amboseli National Park, southeast of Kenya's capital Nairobi, April 25, 2016. (REUTERS photo)
A bird flies over a family of elephants walking in the Amboseli National Park, southeast of Kenya's capital Nairobi, April 25, 2016. (REUTERS photo)

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African elephant poaching declined for a fifth year in a row in 2016, but ivory seizers around the world hit record levels, the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species (Cites) report says.

The report noted that there have been "dramatic losses of elephant populations" over the last decade in Africa, with "levels of illegal killing remaining very high".

While poaching killed 111,000 African elephants, in most places it appears to be levelling off.

About 40 tonnes of trafficked ivory was recovered.

Cites has welcomed the news but sounded a note of caution.

"The global collective effort that is underway is starting to reap positive results, but we are certainly not there yet," the organisation's Secretary-General John Scanlon said.

The report said the record seizure of nearly 40 tonnes of trafficked ivory could be down to better awareness and law enforcement.

It comes despite there being an increase in the amount of ivory being carved into bangles and pendants in Africa, rather than just being exported as tusks to Asia which are easier to intercept.

Mr Scanlon said there was particularly good news in Eastern Africa, which has been badly hit by poaching in the last decade.

"There has been a steady decline in poaching levels since its peak in 2011, and the analysis from 2016 concludes that overall poaching trends have now dropped to pre-2008 levels," he said.

He said that it was now imperative for conservationists "to drive home the advantage we have while the political momentum is with us".

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