The number of gorillas and chimpanzees in Central Africa continues to decline due to poaching, habitat loss and disease according to a new plan published by WWF, International Union for Conservation of Nature, Wildlife Conservation Society and partners.
The strategy, “Regional Action Plan for the Conservation of Western Lowland Gorillas and Central Chimpanzees 2015-2025”—outlines the growing number of threats to these great apes across six range countries, including gaps in law enforcement and the threats by well-connected traffickers seeking to supply the illegal commercial market.
While national and international laws protect the critically endangered western lowland gorilla and the endangered central chimpanzee, the report found that across six countries nearly 80 percent of great apes live outside of protected areas.

In the new plan, 18 landscapes are identified as critical for the continued survival of the region’s great apes. The plan also calls for improved law enforcement, more effective management of great ape habitat outside of protected areas, and better national land-use planning.
Survey data collected between 2003 and 2013 was used to produce great ape population density maps across the entire range of both western lowland gorillas and central chimpanzees to re-assess conservation priorities. These landscapes cover half the geographic range of these two subspecies, yet they harbor over three quarters of the great apes remaining in the region.
The previous plan from 2005 helped to slow the declines in the ape populations; however the growing human population in the region coupled with the expansion of extractive industries and industrial agriculture are putting increasing pressure on the remaining great apes, requiring urgent additional conservation measures.
0 comments:
Post a Comment