Nearly 3,000 wild great apes 'stolen' each year, UN reports

A silverback gorilla male, walks in its enclosure at the Amneville zoo, eastern France on April 04, 2012
A silverback gorilla male, walks in its enclosure at the Amneville zoo, eastern France on April 04, 2012. Almost 3,000 great apes are killed or captured in the wild each year because of rampant illegal trade, according to a new UN report released Monday that voiced fears for their survival.

Almost 3,000 great apes are killed or captured in the wild each year because of rampant illegal trade, according to a new UN report released Monday that voiced fears for their survival.

More than 22,000 great apes are estimated to have been lost to the between 2005 and 2011, according to the study by the UN Environment Programme, which oversees the Great Apes Survival Partnership (Grasp).

"This trade is thriving and extremely dangerous to the long term survival of great apes," said Grasp coordinator Doug Cress, describing the as "sophisticated, ingenious, well financed, well armed".

"At this rate, apes will disappear very quickly," he said.

Capturing a single chimpanzee alive can require killing 10 others, said Cress.

"You cannot walk into a forest and just take one. You have to fight for it. You have to kill the other chimpanzees in the group," he told reporters on the sidelines of a major conference on endangered species in Bangkok.

The fate of captured gorillas was even more bleak as they die quickly from stress, he added.

International trade in chimpanzees, and gorillas—the three African species of great apes—as well as orangutans, the only Asian species, is banned under the Convention on International Trade in Endangered (CITES) whose member countries are gathering in the Thai capital this week.

But in reality great apes are sold as exotic pets for wealthy individuals who see them as status symbols, bought by "disreputable zoos" and exploited by the entertainment and tourist industries, the report said.

"Great apes are used to attract tourists to entertainment facilities such as amusement parks and circuses. They are even used in tourist photo sessions on Mediterranean beaches and clumsy boxing matches in Asian safari parks," it said.

(c) 2013 AFP

Citation: Nearly 3,000 wild great apes 'stolen' each year, UN reports (2013, March 4) retrieved 24 April 2024 from https://phys.org/news/2013-03-wild-great-apes-stolen-year.html
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