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FLORA AND FAUNA
Brazil cracks down on lucrative wild animal trade
by Staff Writers
Rio De Janeiro (AFP) May 1, 2012


Blue-and-yellow macaws from Amazonia, green parrots, monkeys, turtles, anacondas and pumas: wild animal trafficking is a very lucrative business that spares no species in Brazil, including those facing extinction.

"According to our estimates, 38 million wild animals, 80 percent of them birds, are poached from the forest every year in Brazil and nearly 90 percent died during transport," said Rauff Lima, a spokesman for the non-governmental organization Renctas (National Network to Fight Trafficking of Wild Animals).

But Renctas says the traffickers don't worry about the losses as the sale of a single specimen can earn them a profit in an industry now worth nearly $2 billion a year, the most profitable illegal trade after arms and drugs.

In 2001, the organization released the first national report on wildlife trafficking.

In that year, the last wild Little Blue Macaw -- considered one of the world's most endangered species -- disappeared from the northeastern state of Bahia and today only 70 others remain in captivity around the world.

"They are held by private collectors who acquired them illegally," Lima told AFP.

On average, federal police seize 250,000 wild animals per year and the Brazilian environmental agency Ibama captures another 45,000 during controls that have been significantly stepped up in recent years.

At Cetas, the Rio Wildlife Screening Center, which is linked to Ibama, veterinarian Daniel Neves cares for 1,600 animals, many of which were rescued in starving or sick conditions from Brazilian poachers.

Located in a wooded area some 75 kilometers (45 miles) from downtown Rio, Cetas resembles a zoo. Macaws are homed in a vast cage, or "flight corridor," where they can move relatively freely ahead of their future release.

Nearby, some 700 bird cages are stacked up precariously on top of each other.

The animals "remain in quarantine until their health improves," explained Neves. "The aim is to release them into the wild but we succeed for only 20 to 30 percent of them."

The macaws could be sent to zoos but these are already overcrowded, according to the veterinarian, who says Brazil should pass legislation to make animal adoption easier.

"It's a real problem because they (the macaws) are no longer able to fend for themselves in the wild," Neves told AFP.

Brazil, Latin America's largest country with a land area of 8.5 million square kilometers (3.2 million square miles), is considered to have the greatest biodiversity on the planet.

It has 530 species of mammal, 1,800 bird species, 680 different kinds of reptiles, 800 amphibian species and 3,000 varieties of fish.

According to the environment ministry, 627 species now face extinction, a threefold increase in 15 years.

Hunting animals is banned in Brazil, as is holding any wild animal in captivity except in the rare cases of authorized breeding.

With increasing help from Brazil's intelligence services, police have succeeded in tightening the noose on the traffickers, choking off some of the profits from their illegal trade.

To buy a green parrot on the black market or a tucan poached from the wild costs less than 100 dollars while it is worth ten times more in a legal store.

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Peru probes mystery pelican deaths
Lima (AFP) April 30, 2012 - A team of ornithologists on Monday were investigating the mysterious death of nearly 600 sea birds found on the beaches of northern Peru, government officials said.

The investigation follows a probe into the deaths of more than 850 dolphins that have washed ashore since January along the same 170-kilometer (100-mile) stretch of coastline in the northern departments of Piura and Lambayeque.

Peru's Oceanic Institute (IMARPE) said that, as of Sunday, they had found 538 dead pelicans and 54 dead Peruvian Boobies. They also found the carcasses of five sea lions that washed ashore and the decomposed remains of a turtle.

The Ministry of Production, in charge of fisheries, said in a statement that early results suggest that the birds died on the beach, and did not wash ashore dead.

Deputy Environment Minister Gabriel Quijandria said on April 19 that the dolphins were likely killed by a highly infectious virus known as morbillivirus.

Experts however are awaiting test results to know whether they can rule out environmental pollution or other factors.

"It's not the first time this has happened. There have been other instances in Peru, Mexico and the United States," Quijandria added.

Ninety-five percent of the deaths affected bottle-nosed dolphins, officials said.



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Slicing mitotic spindle with lasers, nanosurgeons unravel old pole-to-pole theory
Cambridge, MA (SPX) May 01, 2012
The mitotic spindle, an apparatus that segregates chromosomes during cell division, may be more complex than the standard textbook picture suggests, according to researchers at the Harvard School of Engineering and Applied Sciences (SEAS). The findings, which result from quantitative measurements of the mitotic spindle, will appear tomorrow in the journal Cell. The researchers used a femto ... read more


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