Gorillas dismantling poacher's snares

Luddly Neddite

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: Young gorillas caught dismantling poachers' snares

Young gorillas caught dismantling poachers' snares


In the wild, gorillas are turning into primitive engineers as the newest field findings show that some of these large primates have taught themselves how to dismantle poaching traps in Africa.

"It's just amazing", says Dr. Patricia Wright, a Primatologist at Stony Brook University in New York with over 27 years anthropological experience.

"One of the most extraordinary things that has just happened is that very young gorillas, that are just four years old, have started to take apart traps and snares so that poachers can't catch gorillas."

In Rwanda, four young gorillas were seen disabling a poachers' snare intended to kill gorillas and other animals. These gorillas sprung into action after the same snare killed an elderly gorilla.

Now if we could just teach them to shoot the poachers.

More at the link.
 
: Young gorillas caught dismantling poachers' snares

Young gorillas caught dismantling poachers' snares


In the wild, gorillas are turning into primitive engineers as the newest field findings show that some of these large primates have taught themselves how to dismantle poaching traps in Africa.

"It's just amazing", says Dr. Patricia Wright, a Primatologist at Stony Brook University in New York with over 27 years anthropological experience.

"One of the most extraordinary things that has just happened is that very young gorillas, that are just four years old, have started to take apart traps and snares so that poachers can't catch gorillas."

In Rwanda, four young gorillas were seen disabling a poachers' snare intended to kill gorillas and other animals. These gorillas sprung into action after the same snare killed an elderly gorilla.

Now if we could just teach them to shoot the poachers.

More at the link.


If destruction of private property is a serious enough crime, how are they going to pass the background check?
 
: Young gorillas caught dismantling poachers' snares

Young gorillas caught dismantling poachers' snares


In the wild, gorillas are turning into primitive engineers as the newest field findings show that some of these large primates have taught themselves how to dismantle poaching traps in Africa.

"It's just amazing", says Dr. Patricia Wright, a Primatologist at Stony Brook University in New York with over 27 years anthropological experience.

"One of the most extraordinary things that has just happened is that very young gorillas, that are just four years old, have started to take apart traps and snares so that poachers can't catch gorillas."

In Rwanda, four young gorillas were seen disabling a poachers' snare intended to kill gorillas and other animals. These gorillas sprung into action after the same snare killed an elderly gorilla.

Now if we could just teach them to shoot the poachers.

More at the link.


If destruction of private property is a serious enough crime, how are they going to pass the background check?

Poachers don't care that they can't pass background checks. They just steal, murder and run.
 
Eastern gorillas critically endangered...
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World’s largest gorillas one step from extinction
Tue, Sep 06, 2016 - The world’s largest gorillas have been pushed to the brink of extinction by a surge of illegal hunting in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DR Congo) and are now critically endangered, officials said on Sunday.
With just 5,000 Eastern gorillas left on Earth, the majestic species now faces the risk of disappearing completely, officials said at the global conference of the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) in Honolulu. Four out of six of the Earth’s great apes are now critically endangered, “only one step away from going extinct,” including the Eastern gorilla, Western gorilla, Bornean orangutan and Sumatran orangutan, the IUCN said in an update to its Red List, the world’s most comprehensive inventory of plant and animal species. Chimpanzees and bonobos are listed as endangered. “Today is a sad day because the IUCN Red List shows we are wiping out some of our closest relatives,” IUCN director-general Inger Andersen told reporters.

War, hunting and loss of land to refugees in the past 20 years have led to a “devastating population decline of more than 70 percent” of the Eastern gorilla, the IUCN’s update said. One of the two subspecies of Eastern gorilla, known as Grauer’s gorilla, has drastically declined since 1994, when there were 16,900 individuals, to just 3,800 last year. Even though killing these apes is against the law, hunting is their greatest threat, experts said. The second subspecies of Eastern gorilla — the mountain gorilla — has seen a small rebound in its numbers and totals about 880 individuals.

John Robinson, a primatologist and chief conservation officer at the Wildlife Conservation Society, said the Rwandan genocide sparked a disastrous series of events that impacted gorillas, too. “The genocide pushed a lot of people out of Rwanda, a lot of refugees into eastern DR Congo, who moved into areas which were relatively unoccupied by human beings,” he said. “It was a situation that kind of unraveled.”

Some people hunted gorillas for bushmeat, while activities like mining, charcoal production and human settlement also infringed on gorillas’ habitat. “The people that moved into that part of DR Congo saw gorillas as a delicacy,” Robinson said. The IUCN Red List includes 82,954 species — both plants and animals — and undergoes a major update every four years. Almost one-third — 23,928 — are threatened with extinction, it said.

World’s largest gorillas one step from extinction - Taipei Times
 

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