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FLORA AND FAUNA
Kenya rhino-poaching doubled last year
by Staff Writers
Nairobi (AFP) Feb 27, 2014


French zoo triplets boost for endangered Asiatic lions
Paris (AFP) Feb 27, 2014 - Three Asiatic lion cubs have been born in a French zoo in a major boost for the critically endangered species.

The cubs were born on December 30 in a zoo attached to the natural history museum in Besancon, eastern France.

"These births raise hopes for the survival of this endangered species," the zoo's veterinarian Melanie Berthet told AFP.

According to the museum, there are only 350 Asiatic lions left in the wild, all of them living in the Gir forest in India's western Gujarat state.

"There are 56 zoos across the world which have Asiatic Lions but only eight of them are in a position to breed," Berthet added.

The latest arrivals' eight-year-old mother, Shiva, was born in the same zoo. The father, Tejas, was born in Bristol in Britain five years ago.

The two lions were paired last year and Shiva gave birth to a first female cub in August.

Berthet said the mother was "raising the new cubs brilliantly". The father was being kept at a distance but was able to smell and see them and appeared to have accepted them.

She said the father would only be allowed to come into direct contact with the cubs in a month's time as there was still a risk that he could attack them.

Listed as endangered on the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) Red List, the Asiatic lion (panthera leo persica) was once widely distributed across southwest Asia.

Armed poachers slaughtered double the number of Kenyan rhinos in 2013 compared to the year before amid a surge in wildlife killings, government officials said Thursday.

At least 59 rhinos were killed for their horns last year, compared to 30 in 2012, Kenya Wildlife Service (KWS) spokesman Paul Mbugua said.

The rise in poaching -- with rhinos even being killed inside the heavily guarded Kenyan capital's national park -- show that poachers have little fear of tough new laws designed to stem the wave of of killings.

There was more positive news for elephants, with killings down by around a fifth, from 384 killed in 2012 to 302 last year.

But Mbugua told AFP that "poachers have become more aggressive".

"They will stop at nothing to get their target," he said. "If you stand between them and the elephants or rhinos, they will kill you."

Around 1,030 rhinos are now left in Kenya, and some 38,000 elephants.

Poaching has risen sharply in Africa in recent years, with rhinos and elephants particularly hard-hit. An INTERPOL report this week saying there had been record levels of global ivory seizures worldwide in 2013.

Asian consumers who buy smuggled rhino horn -- which is made of keratin, the same material as human fingernails -- believe that it has powerful healing properties.

Ivory is sought for jewellery and decorative objects.

INTERPOL said that criminal gangs are "making millions at the cost of our wildlife with comparatively little risk."

It noted that the seizure of "large-scale ivory shipments -- each one representing the slaughter of hundreds of elephants -- point to the involvement of organised crime networks operating across multiple countries."

Last month a Kenyan court handed out a record sentence to a Chinese ivory smuggler, the first person to be convicted under a new law, after he was arrested carrying an ivory tusk weighing 3.4 kilogrammes (7.5 pounds).

He was ordered to pay 20 million shillings (170,500 euros, $233,000) or else go to jail for seven years.

Kenya is also a key transit point for ivory smuggled from across the region.

Africa's elephant population is estimated at 500,000 animals, compared with 1.2 million in 1980 and 10 million in 1900, and they are listed as vulnerable.

Safari tours are a key draw for tourism to Kenya, which accounts for 12.5 percent of the country's revenue and 11 percent of jobs.

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