African Wildlife Harder to Protect During Coronavirus
疫情致非洲野生动物保护难度增加
A drop in tourism during the coronavirus crisis is making it more difficult for some organizations to protect threatened wildlife in Africa.
新冠病毒危机期间旅游业下滑,导致一些组织保护非洲濒危野生动物的难度增加。
Wildlife officials fear poaching activity will rise because the collapse of the travel industry leaves less money for guarding animals.
野生动物方面的官员担心,因旅游业崩溃造成动物保护的资金减少,偷猎活动会顺势增加。
In Kenya, the Ol Pejeta Conservancy project is home to more than 130 black rhinos. It forms the single largest group of the animals in East and Central Africa.
肯尼亚Ol Pejeta保护区工程是130多头黑犀牛的家园, 它是东非和中非最大的动物群。
"We are more alert because maybe more poachers will use this time to come in to poach," said John Tekeles. He is a guard at the Ol Pejeta Conservancy. His comments were reported by The Associated Press (AP).
African rhinos have long been under threat from poachers who kill them for their horns. The illegal trade is fueled by the belief, in some cultures, that the horns have medicinal value which has not been proven by science.
The number of black rhinos in Africa has been slowly increasing. But a report in March by the International Union for Conservation of Nature, IUCN, said it still considered the animals "critically endangered." In part, the organization credits the comeback of the rhinos to effective law enforcement.
However, Ol Pejeta's director, Richard Vigne, said enforcement measures are very costly. He said he spends about $10,000 each year for every rhino to pay for the protection.
"In our case, that comes to close to $2 million a year," Vigne told the AP. "In the time of COVID, when tourism has completely stopped, where most of our revenue comes from tourism...it's a complete disaster." COVID-19 is the disease caused by the coronavirus.
The conservancy expects to lose $3 to $4 million this year. Vigne said the loss severely limits the group's ability to protect the rhinos.
该保护区今年将损失300到400万美元,维格勒指出,这些损失严重限制了该组织保护犀牛的能力。
Wildlife activists across Africa are now waiting to see how poachers will react to the current situation, and whether more rare wildlife will be killed.
Poaching of African rhinos had been decreasing in recent years, the IUCN reported. The group said there were 892 acts of poaching in 2018, down from a high of 1,349 in 2015.
The IUCN said the population of black rhinos grew at a yearly rate of 2.5 percent between 2012 and 2018. Now, there are more than 5,600 animals. That growth was predicted to continue over the next five years, the environmental group said.