Related
Stories
- Could legalising horn trade save rhinos?
- Rhino GPS used to deter poachers
- 'Global surge' in rhino poaching
![]() |
| South Africa has the largest population of rhinos in the world |
Poachers
have already killed a record number of rhinos in South Africa this year, with
455 slaughtered so far, the government has said.
Only 13
rhinos were killed in 2007 but this rose sharply to 448 in 2011 - more than in
any previous year.
Poaching is
being driven by the soaring price of rhino horn, which is used in traditional
medicine in Asian countries such as China and Vietnam.
South
Africa has about 20,000 rhinos, or 90% of all the rhinos in Africa.
Most of the
rhinos - 272 of the 455 - were killed in the world-famous Kruger National Park,
the government's environmental affairs department said.
Efforts to
curb poaching were continuing, with 207 people arrested so far this year, it
added.
'More expensive
than gold'
The South
African government deployed troops along the country's borders earlier this
year in an attempt to stamp out the illegal trade.
The
Endangered Wildlife Trust said it was shocked that the number of rhinos being
killed was continuing to rise, AFP news agency reports.
"We're
sitting at 455 with the two worst months to go and if you consider the growth
rate is 6% a year, we're getting close to tipping point. That means when your
deaths exceed your births, so the species starts to go into decline," the
group's rhino project project manager, Kirsty Brebner, said.
The killing
of rhinos has soared in recent years to meet the demand for their horns in
Asian traditional medicine, especially in China and Vietnam, where they are
thought to have powerful healing properties.
But
scientists say rhino horns are made from the same material as fingernails and
have no proven medicinal properties.
The black
market price of rhino horn is now in the region of $65,000 (£40,000) per kg -
more than gold.
South
Africa has become the focal point of the rhino trade because it has between 70%
and 80% of the global population of rhinos.

No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.