Imagine yourself in Africa roaming the land along the country's most beloved inhabitant the African Elephant one of the most significant creatures which symbolizes strength and power. Now imagine yourself as an elephant running for your life because a couple poacher are trying to shoot you in the head just. So they can get a hold of your beautiful ivory or tusk. Many humans believe animals were sent on earth to serve for our own personal purpose which is a false belief invented by people who do not have a conscious about the increase in the ICUN Red List.
Garett Hardin states "Environmentalists use the metaphor of the earth as a 'spaceship ' in trying to persuade countries, industries, and people to stop wasting and polluting our natural resources"
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That is a lot of lives being destroyed just for their horns for aphrodisiacs ' or therapeutic purposes that may not even work but upper class people pay golds of money to satisfy their needs and not have a second thought what that poor Rhino went through to lose its horn. Poaching for their horns has increased worldwide while attempts to keep the rhino was considered progressively ineffective. The biggest serious estimate that only 3% of poachers is successfully opposed reported to Zimbabwe, while in Nepal they avoided the crisis (Save the Rhino). One other thing we are seeing happening is the decline in African Elephants and other elephants as well. Given the poverty of many people, and the high value of elephant tusks and their ivory, most of them being shipped overseas and being sold on the black market or fashion industries. Although in Africa they have many national parks and reserves who protects the wildlife, elephant populations are still declining, and the situation is getting worse by false protection services who increase their salary allowing poaching. About 30,000 elephants were killed yearly for their ivory, the elephant population of Africa has diminished by 90% over the last 50 years and 30% in the last 7 years. With fewer elephants surviving in Africa and a tenacious request for …show more content…
This is a serious crime being committed by the black market that pays millions of dollars in trade of animal parts. It is a known fact animal parts are being sold as novelty items like jewelry and as a "medicinal" property mostly for Chinese medicine. Environmental groups or animal rights groups, are desperately trying to put a stop to these poachers because of the decline in animal wildlife and an increase in the ICUN Red List. The United States is only second to China for its desire for illegal wildlife parts either for medicine or personal desires. According to Orietta C. Estrada from the One Green Planet organization states that a number of rich poachers have killed over 30,000 elephants in the last year. It is a belief that elephants, mainly the African and Indian Elephant, will become extinct within the next ten years if poachers continue murdering the elephants at this rate (One Green
In the nonfiction book Ivory, Horn, and Blood by Ronald Orenstein, the author discusses his opinions on the topic of poaching elephants and rhinos. Orenstein believes that poaching is morally wrong, unnecessary, and should be stopped. He refrains from using emotional words, instead focusing on and providing startling statistics and horrifying facts.
Because of the poaching of game like the elephant, the number of species will start to diminish. What hunters brought to the villages of Botswana was the money and the meat from the animals to feed the many people that go hungry everyday. Hunters that would take animals such as an elephant wouldn’t take any of the meat for themselves but rather they give all of the meat to the villages in the area. However, when poaching starts to take over, there will be zero meat or money that will be put back into the community. Poachers that kill elephants are only after one thing and that is the ivory from the elephant tusks. After taking the tusks, the elephant is left to rot. Another animal that is sought after by poachers in Botswana is the rhino. The rhino is poached for their horns, which are supposedly an aphrodisiac in China so the demand is high. Because of these effects, groups like SCI are so important to different places around the world. The money brought in by the hunters is used to hire conservation officers to protect the rhinos and elephants and to buy land that will be put into game preserves so the numbers of these species will increase because there aren’t any pressures from hunting or
The metaphor use by environmentalist is that the earth is a “spaceship” trying to persuade countries, industries and people to stop wasting and polluting our natural resources (Hardin pg. 542). They argue that since everyone lives on this planet, no one should have the right to mess with or destroy it. Then, they go on the
Animals are supposed to be treated with respect. Examples of disrespect include entertainment such as Sea World and circuses. But instead of living harmoniously with them. Humans have tampered with their way of life. The deadly combination of habitat destruction and poaching has eliminated numerous species. Both parties are aware of the aftermath. However only one party is capable of making a change. Time is running out and it dosn't look good. If a change dosn't occur soon, the few remaining wild Elephants will become extinct.
Whether we like it or not animals really make the world go around. Like cows who just by breathing create oxygen, to other animals who with their migrations that leave paths throughout are foothills. And yes even fertilizing the land with their discharge. Although these creatures who have been roaming the lands long before any of us , have been altered with our interference of hunger and need which has now made hunting a billion dollar company. Like most companies you would expect viewpoints to clash causing controversy. A podcast by the name of the Rhino Hunter brings this up showing how the auctioning off of rare animals is beneficial. They in fact action a “older Black Rhino, that with age was Hurting others”. This idea along with other
Planet Earth is the one and only home for humans, and it’s their natural duty to protect it and all of its inhabitants. For many people, the fate of animals is of little importance, especially when there are so many of their own species suffering throughout the world. However, only when one has respect for nature can he or she come to appreciate for his or herself. In the past few decades, some animals have progressively come closer and closer to extinction. When compared to demographics 30 years ago, less than 5% of tiger and rhino populations remain in the wild (Congressional). The main culprits for this abominable crime against nature are avaricious poachers who seek personal gain and profit. Poaching is the illegal killing of
Evidence shows that we cannot put an exact figure that will completely end the Rhinoceros poaching issue because we have not found a suitable way that can stop the poaching, ways have been developed to reduce the number of Rhinoceros killings but not put a stop to it.
Garret Hardin mentions environmentalists use the metaphor of Earth as a spaceship. People persuade countries, industries, and people to stop polluting and wasting our national resources because everyone shares life on this planet. Hardin brings up the spaceship metaphor to inform the public that Earth can not be a spaceship. On a spaceship there is a captain, a single person tell everyone what to do. Earth does not have a single leader telling everyone what to do instead we have the United Nations which are different country leaders that are leading their nations. Additionally Hardin states that the United Nations has little power to enforce any policy among other nations. A spaceship can not be piloted by many people bickering and
Recently, the poaching controversy has gained more attention in the news and media due to the killing of Cecil the Lion back in 2015. But what exactly is poaching and why is it illegal? Poaching can be defined as the illegal hunting or capturing of wild animals. Animals are captured and killed for their parts and products that are eventually sold on the black market and to cartels to make medicines, trinkets, and other products. Animals are typically poached for personal gain and value.The the illegal poaching trade in Africa alone has accumulated a worth of $17 billion dollars a year and it keeps growing. Ivory, fur, skin, and bones especially are in high demand and places/people are willing to pay high numbers for these products, so it is no surprise that people continue to hunt them. Due to poaching, the tiger is one of the most endangered species in the world . Tiger parts, such as fur, skin, and bones, are seen as a luxury and are used as commerce on the black market and secretly throughout Asia. Although China has participated in the Convention on International Trade of Endangered Species, the laws are commonly ignored and it remains the primary destination for tiger parts. Elephants are also on the brink of extinction and the number hunted per year keeps increasing. Despite international ivory trade being banned in the 1990s, it is still sold on the black market and sought after in Asia; once again, China being the biggest demander. According to Kideghesho in Sage Journals , “widespread poaching coupled with inefficient law enforcement in Tanzania was manifested in the dramatic decline of the elephant population to less than 30% of what it was in 1979, a drop from 316,000 to 85,000 by 1987.” Rhinos are also greatly sought after in Africa. In
There are organizations around the globe designed to stop elephant poaching. Their intent is to sway people’s opinions to help with the world-wide problem. Only a global ban on the sale of ivory would take the heat off of these massive creatures. Solutions might include, addressing the involvement of international criminal institutes by means of strong law enforcement at both national and international levels along the full extent of the supply. Closing down domestic (national) markets in ivory, would also be beneficial. Countries could embrace the trade ban, and educate consumers in order to stem the demand for ivory (Bloody Ivory; January 11, 2013).
Animal poaching has a bigger price tag than the trophy sitting on the shelf. Poaching is causing iconic animals of many continents and of our oceans to become endangered or even extinct. These animals that people have come to love and fantasize over may be gone before we are (Africa). Elephants, rhinos, lions, and zebras are the animals thought of the most when it comes to animal poaching, but many animals are poached. They are killed for only one quality, like their horns or skins and the rest of the animal is left behind. Poaching is a massive business that is ran by international networks, it’s estimated to make hundreds of millions of dollars (World). Not all wildlife trade is illegal, but it becomes a crisis when an increasing amount of illegal poaching is done and it directly threatens the survival of species in the wild (World). Since 1960 97.6% of the Black Rhino population in Africa has been poached and lions are extinct in seven African countries (Africa).
Elephant populations suffered a drop in numbers that carried the species into the endangered animals list. At the beginning of the twentieth century, about ten million elephants lived in Africa. Presently, the ten million is reduced to half a million because of illegal hunting and habitat loss. Studies of the population show twenty-two thousand were killed in 2012 and twenty-five thousand in 2011. When comparing the death rate to the natural population growth, there is a possibility the largest mammal on Earth could be extinct soon (Vaughan 1). Because the elephant is the largest animal to walk on land, the greatly increasing human population affects the elephant population first. They live in some regions of the world that have the densest human population which continues to grow, which therefore continuously decreases their own population (Bryner 1). As the human population swiftly increases, the elephant population in turn, decreases. This is so because they cannot cohabitate the same living space. Elephants and humans cannot cohabitate because they would kill each other due to the inability to communicate. About population recovery, the Animal wildlife foundation states, “Populations of elephants- especially in Southern and Eastern Africa- that once showed promising signs of recovery could be at risk due to the recent surge in poaching for the illegal ivory trade”(1). Poaching presents one of the main issues that make recovery so difficult for these animals.
Satao – the world’s largest African elephant and one of the last surviving ‘great tuskers’ was found dead in Tsavo National Park, Kenya in June 2014. Satao was famous for its huge tusks that reached down to the ground. The carcass of 45-year-old elephant with its face mutilated and great tusks hacked off was left for vultures and scavengers. Poachers had killed Satao with poisoned arrows for the ivory that weighed over 100 pounds. According to the data provided by Landmark Analysis, poachers seeking ivory had killed more than 100,000 African elephants in just three years. One of the largest mass elephant slaughter in decades took place in Cameroon, in 2012 where poachers using Ak47s and grenades had killed more than 300 elephants. A
The world is filled with all kinds of mammals, birds, insects, reptiles, amphibians, and fish. There are over one and a half million species already described and documented and believed that there are even more still undocumented today (“Fact Monster Science” 2014).
Poaching is when people go and kill animals illegally for resources such as ivory to make money off of, and in places like Africa where most of the population is poor poaching is one of the biggest issues of animal cruelty.