Giraffes: The Silent Extinction of Gentle Giants

PHOTOGRAPH BY JOEL SARTORE, NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC PHOTO ARK

Towering at 14 to 19 feet tall, giraffes are the world’s tallest land animals. Children and adults alike are fascinated by this iconic species — there is no other animal on Earth that resembles a giraffe with its elongated neck, stilt-like legs, and even enviable eyelashes! The length of their necks, faces, and tongues (up to 50 cm in length) allow them to select and eat the leaves off of bushes and trees. Eating up high allows for less food competition from other animals that forage below, which means overall less stress on the ecosystem. Their necks are also used as weapons by sparring males. And what looks like “horns” on a giraffe’s head are also used as weapons while fighting. They are called ossicones. These conical-shaped bones are covered in skin and hair (unlike other animal horns or antlers) and grow throughout the lifetime of a giraffe.

To cope with such long legs, giraffes have a special way of walking. Unlike most other animals, their front and back limbs walk in sync with their right side and left side. They can also run quite fast — up to 56 km/hr which is enough to outrun a lion! Drinking with such long legs and necks is quite challenging and they can fall victim to predators in this vulnerable position.
A giraffe’s pattern is immediately recognizable by its distinctiveness — just like how we would immediately recognize a tiger’s stripes. Reticulated giraffes are dark with white line patterns. Scientists identify individual giraffes by the patterns on their coats because each giraffe has its own unique pattern. There are nine subspecies of giraffes across Africa. Giraffes have roamed our planet for over a million years.

And so it may be hard to believe that these magnificent creatures are now facing what some are calling a “silent extinction” due to a lack of global awareness. In areas where they once roamed plenty, their numbers have been drastically and alarmingly reduced by about 80% in the last 15 years alone! In the northeast of Kenya, there were over 36 000 and today there are between 5000 and 7000. What is happening? Poaching, trophy hunting, and habitat encroachment are responsible for the demise of the giraffe population. Some trophy hunters kill giraffes simply for their tails as they are considered status symbols. Poverty coupled with habitat encroachment leads people to kill giraffes for food and for their coats to sell. The few scientists working on the ground trying to help giraffes believe that educating and involving the local communities could help to save some of the remaining giraffes. Tactics such as naming giraffes after community members has helped to make them feel involved and become stewards of giraffes.

One incredible individual who has spent her entire life researching the giraffes that she loves is biologist Dr. Anne Innis Dagg. Dr. Dagg is to giraffes what Jane Goodall is to chimps. A pioneer in her field — and being a woman — she faced many challenges throughout her career while venturing to Africa on her own as a young woman. Now with years of invaluable research collected and respect earned, a feature-length documentary has been filmed about the life of Dr. Dagg called The Woman Who Loves Giraffes. This important film also brings much-needed attention to the silent extinction.

Dr. Dagg continues to inspire others to collect further research on wild giraffes in Africa. For example, giraffes are considered to be more or less mute, however some scientists now suspect that giraffes may be communicating out of our hearing range. Recent research on giraffe behaviour has also revealed more about community and social bonds between giraffes. It has been observed that mothers share “babysitting” responsibilities for each other and even allow suckling. A field researcher also discovered an incredibly strong bond of a mother giraffe that was grieving her dead calf. The mother did not leave her deceased calf for five whole days — not even to eat. She stayed by its side. Continuing research and sharing observations like these could lead more people to care about these gentle giants and take action to save them. Let’s break the silence on this silent extinction and sound the alarm! Together, let’s protect our giraffes — now.

To take immediate action to help giraffes, please visit: https://thewomanwholovesgiraffes.com/take-action/

Sources:
https://www.cbc.ca/natureofthings/episodes/giraffes-the-forgotten-giants
https://www.nationalgeographic.com/animals/mammals/g/giraffe/
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ossicone
https://africageographic.com/blog/7-facts-giraffe/?mc_cid=e42d6b8762&mc_eid=6fa719f40a

Elephant Tusks or Trinkets?

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I was outraged to learn that Yahoo is profiting off of the sale of ivory by allowing ivory to be sold on its online network. Yahoo Japan is making huge profits by selling illegal ivory online. The global company Yahoo is separate from Yahoo Japan, however being its second largest shareholder, it has a huge say on Yahoo Japan’s policy. The illegal sale of ivory is a huge and bloody business. A pair of tusks from a single male elephant can weigh over 250 pounds. Each pound can be sold for up to $1500 on the black market. China and the United States are the world’s largest markets for ivory products. Ivory is considered a luxury cultural item in China. The main ivory products produced to meet demand are… trinkets. Here are just a few elephant facts to see if we can perhaps justify the massive demand for ivory trinkets:

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  • Elephants are glorious, grand, and majestic. OK – that is my opinion, not necessarily a fact!
  • They are the largest animals to walk the surface of our planet. The largest elephant on record weighed
    24 000 lbs!
  • Elephants are highly intelligent, self-aware, and sentient beings. They have incredible memories. They are family-oriented and show compassion by “hugging” and caressing each other.
  • They love to play. And to communicate, elephants purr like cats!
  • Elephants use their tusks to defend themselves, dig for water, and lift objects.
  • Elephants cry and grieve. When passing a place where a loved one has died, an elephant will stop and remain silently still up to several minutes. The elephant will gently touch the bones of the deceased with its trunk and feet…

So… Have we justified slaughtering these magnificent and sensitive animals only to savagely extract their tusks and carve them into trinkets? The answer is a clear and indisputable NO.

1_citizenivory_nationalgeographic_1494092_ivory.adapt.1190.1Elephants are endangered. About 100 elephants are being slaughtered every day. THEY ARE STILL ALIVE while the tusks are being savagely hacked out from their heads. Unimaginable… They suffer excruciating pain and family members are exposed to and are aware of all the terror. Killing the alphas, which have the largest tusks, disrupts the herd’s entire social structure and creates many traumatized orphans. Habitat destruction and climate change are also contributing to the plight of elephants. Experts predict that elephants could be extinct from the wild in 10 or 20 years. We just CANNOT allow that to happen.

After public pressure, Google and Amazon have refused to sell ivory on their networks. So let’s put the pressure on Yahoo to do the same. Click here to sign a quick petition to tell Yahoo that we will not stand idly by while they contribute to the bloody ivory trade. Together, let’s protect our elephants – now.

Thank you for reading and for signing.

Update from Avaaz.org: “Our campaign is working!! Massive media on our petition forced Yahoo to publicly ask Yahoo Japan to review its ivory policy. But that’s not enough — only a total Yahoo sales ban will protect elephants. Let’s keep the pressure on — sign and share with everyone.”

(Sources: http://www.happyelephantcontest.com/fun-facts/; http://techtrendske.co.ke/conservationists-petition-yahoo-to-stop-selling-elephant-ivory-online/; http://theweek.com/articles/449437/tragic-price-ivory; https://www.thedodo.com/community/Elegirl/the-truth-about-tusks-648225506.html )

Rhino Horns: Turning Fiction into Fact

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I found out an extremely important fact today about rhino horns. But before I get to it, let’s look at some interesting rhino facts to get to know this species and appreciate it. And then look at why it is being hunted to the brink of extinction…

The name rhinoceros comes from the Greek words rhino, which means nose, and ceros, which means horn. Rhinos look very prehistoric to me. That makes sense since they have been around for over 50 million years! There are five species of rhinos. Two live in Africa (white and black rhinos – they are both actually grey) and three live in South-Asia (Javan, Sumatran, and Greater one-horned rhinos). Rhinos are big. The white rhino is the largest mammal on land after the elephant. It can weigh over 7700 lbs! As large as they are, they are herbivores. Another cool fact: The oxpecker is a bird that helps the rhino by eating bugs on its skin. And the oxpecker will call out to the rhino when danger is approaching. Fascinating! Oh, and if you save an orphan rhino, it can be quite cuddly!

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The black, Javan, and Sumatran rhinos are all listed as critically endangered (50% chance of becoming extinct in three generations). The Javan rhino is the world’s rarest land mammal. There are less 50 left! The rhino is being hunted for its splendid horn. It suffers an agonizing death – it is shot, its horn is sliced off, and then it is left to bleed to death… Increasing markets in China and Vietnam are driving the demand. The horn is used in traditional Chinese medicine to treat things such as fever, headaches, and terminal illnesses. It is also used for trivial things such as hangovers and aphrodisiacs. And owning a horn is seen as a status symbol.

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So here is the extremely important fact that I found out today: Rhino horns are made of keratin – the same substance that make up our fingernails and hair. So it is no more a medicinal remedy than our own nails and hair. That’s right, it has NEVER been proven that the horn has any medicinal properties at all. So why kill a magnificent endangered animal for NO reason? (There will never be a good reason in my mind.) It is time to turn the tide on these dangerously lethal and misinformed cultural traditions.

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How can you help? Keep spreading the word! And see my “Be a Hero! Take Action!” tips in my website’s sidebar. And you can help via these two organizations dedicated to saving the world’s rhinos: savetherhino.org and wildaid.org. Together, let’s protect our rhinos – now.

 

(Sources: savetherhino.org; livescience.com; wildaid.org)