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Wednesday, July 17, 2013

Picture of the Day

I just can't get over how absolutely adorable this picture is!  The little fuzz on the head says it all.  

Also, to my readers, I will be away for the next three weeks .  I'm not sure if I will be able to do a daily post as I've been doing for the past  259 days.  However, I will try to find Wi-Fi on the road!



Baby Asian Elephant in Tall Grass

Photograph by William Albert Allard
Baby elephants are born big, standing approximately three feet (one meter) tall and weighing 200 pounds (91 kilograms) at birth. They nurse for two to three years, and are fully mature at 9 (females) to 15 (males) years of age.



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Tuesday, July 16, 2013

Clinton Steps Up For Elephants

Yay! Great news!  The following Washington Post article states that wildlife conservation groups are coming together to help defend elephants from poachers.  I feel confident that with such a smart, strong woman like Mrs. Clinton standing up for the elephants, we can stop the poaching problem.





Hillary Rodham Clinton will join with environmentalists to press for an end to elephant poaching (Credit: Manuel Balce Ceneta/AP)

Hillary Rodham Clinton has agreed to take up the public fight of saving African elephants, who are being slaughtered in large numbers to supply the growing demand for ivory in China and other Asian countries.

Clinton, who met privately with representatives from a dozen environmental groups and National Geographic at the Wildlife Conservation Society’s Central Park Zoo on Monday, pledged to use her political connections as America’s former secretary of state to enlist other world leaders in the effort to curtail the illegal ivory trade.

Cristian Samper, WCS president and CEO, said in an interview that elephant poaching has reached such a crisis point that the world’s leading conservation groups are launching a coordinated strategy to address the problem.

Clinton agreed to “take some very specific steps, including using her political contacts with heads of state in trying to raise awareness about this issue,” Samper said. “This is an issue that needs to be elevated, not just in terms of public awareness, but particularly with the political leaders in other countries.”

As the demand for ivory has grown in Asia — where the ivory from a tusk can sell for $1,000 a pound — the poaching of African elephants has exploded. Roughly 30,000 African elephants were killed illegally in 2012, according to the World Wildlife Fund, the largest number in 20 years.

There were roughly 1.2 million elephants in Africa in 1980, compared to roughly 420,000 last year. The African forest elephant, which resides in the Congo Basin and is smaller than the renowned savannah African elephant, has been hit particularly hard. This spring, WCS estimated that the population of African forest elephants plummeted 76 percent in the last decade.

“The fact that we’ve lost three quarters of the elephants, it’s alarming and clearly we have to do something about it,” Samper said.

As secretary of state, Clinton showed an interest in the plight of African elephants, hosting a conference on the issue in Washington last year. Clinton declined to comment Tuesday.

John E. Scanlon, Secretary-General.of the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora (CITES), welcomed Clinton’s involvement in the issue.

“The magnitude of the threat requires a commensurate response from enforcement-related bodies and personnel at all levels – national, regional and global,” Scanlon said in a statement. “In particular, we must use our collective efforts to help national enforcement officers deploy the same suite of tools used to combat other types of crime.”

The groups at the meeting — including the African Parks Network, the American Association of Zoos and Aquaria, Conservation International, the Nature Conservancy, TRAFFIC and WWF — agreed to pursue a three-pronged strategy aimed at stopping the killing, trafficking and demand for elephants.

Two weeks ago, President Obama launched a major initiative aimed at curbing wildlife trafficking, creating a Cabinet-level presidential task force charged with devising a national strategy and pledging $10 million in technological and training assistance to African governments so they could better combat poaching.

~Juliet Eilperin

The Washington Post
July 16, 2013



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Monday, July 15, 2013

National Geographic's Picture of the Day

An amazing photograph of a mother and her baby in India!




Elephant and Calf, India

Photograph by Sandesh Kadur
This Month in Photo of the Day: Animal Pictures
Wild elephants live in India's fertile Kaziranga floodplain, where marshland, tall grass, and forests provide shelter and food. Kaziranga National Park takes in 50 miles of the Brahmaputra River and harbors some 1,300 elephants.






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Sunday, July 14, 2013

Do YOU Watch 60 Minutes?

After just watching 60 Minutes about endangered turtles and tortoises, I decided to research if elephants ever lived on Madagascar.  The answer is no, but they have always lived 250 miles away on the continent of Africa.  Here are a few of the many extinct species from Madagascar.  

-Giant Aye-Aye 
-Giant Fossa
-Hipposideros Besaoka
-Homotherium
-Koala Lemur
-Malagasy Aardvark
-Malagasy Hippopotamus

Malagasy Hippopotamus 
Malagasy Aardvark 

Giant Aye-Aye 
Giant Fossa

Homotherium








Why do I care?  Elephants could be extinct in our lifetime.







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Saturday, July 13, 2013

Less Than 1,500 Left

With less than 1,500 Borneo Pygmy Elephants left in the wild, we need to give them 100% of our attention and protection.  

Please watch this short video about an orphaned elephant named Joe.



"The picture was a tearjerker: a baby elephant trying to revive his dead mother with his little trunk. She and the other thirteen Malaysian pygmy elephants in his herd were apparently poisoned to death in the Gunung Rara forest reserve. Their bodies were found in an area that was being converted from forest to commercial farmland.
Left alone the orphan surely would have died, but thankfully he was found, and there was room at the inn. Lok Kawi Wildlife Park in Malaysia’s Sabah state took the little guy in and named him Joe, short for Kejora (“Morning Star”).
When Joe arrived at Lok Kawi, he was separated from the other elephants because workers didn’t know the cause of his mother’s death; if it was a bacterial infection, they feared that Joe might spread it to other sanctuary residents. Officials have since identified the poison that killed his mother and has released Baby Joe from quarantine.
Today, Baby Joe is thriving. Since his rescue, he has more than doubled in weight, from 90 kg to almost 200. He has bonded with his caretaker, Augustine, who can be seen here giving the fuzzy tot a bath. He also has a new best friend: Bikang, a four-year-old fellow pygmy elephant. Bikang found his way to the sanctuary when he was discovered injured in the wild after losing part of his trunk to a trap.
Bikang will likely move to the Sabah Wildlife Department’s Borneo Pygmy Elephant Sanctuary and spend his life there. Officials expect Baby Joe to follow him a couple years later, but don’t know whether he will stay. While they hope that eventually Joe can be released to the wild, it may not be possible because he is now used to humans — though even wild pygmy elephants are known to be more gentle and friendlier to humans than Asian elephants.
As the World Wildlife Fund puts it, “Walt Disney himself couldn’t have crafted a cuter elephant. The pygmy elephants of Borneo are baby-faced with oversized ears, plump bellies and tails so long they sometimes drag on the ground as they walk.”
A mere 1,500 pygmy elephants survive today, most of them in Malaysia. The animals are threatened by deforestation. They need large, continuous tracts of forest to find enough food to keep their massive bodies going, but humans are breaking up the forests to sell the lumber and convert the land to commercial farming. As a result pygmy elephants have less food available to them, and they are encountering humans more often when they return to former feeding spots and find the trees replaced by people.
The World Wildlife Fund has called on the Malaysian government to do more to protect pygmy elephants by listing them as “totally protected,” protecting their habitat from loggers and increasing patrols to prevent illegal actions.
Like Baby Joe’s herd, an elephant herd in Sumatra was killed by poisoned fruit that people left out for them to eat, National Geographic reports.
If local governments do not take steps to protect the endangered elephants and their habitats, people will continue to take their land and kill them to protect it."
~Piper Hoffman
Care 2
July 13, 2013


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Friday, July 12, 2013

The Problem Continues.

The problem is not getting any better.  More than 1,000 ivory tusks were confiscated from this one man. 

A Tanzanian businessman was charged Friday with smuggling more than a thousand elephant ivory tusks, officials said.
“Selemani Isanzu Chasema, in his 50s, is believed to have exported 781 tusks through Malawi,” in May, prosecuting attorney Tumaini Kweka told AFP.
Chasema, who denied the charges, was arrested earlier this month in Tanzania’s commercial capital Dar es Salaam with 347 elephant tusks.
If found guilty, he could face a minimum of 15 years in jail.
Poaching has risen sharply in Africa in recent years, with gunmen wiping out whole herds of elephants as well as targeting rhinos.
The illegal ivory trade, estimated to be worth between $7 and $10 billion (5.37 and 7.67 billion euros) a year, is mostly fuelled by demand in Asia and the Middle East, where elephant tusks and rhinoceros horns are used in traditional medicine and to make ornaments.
Earlier this month US President Barack Obama signed an executive order launching a $10 million (7.7 million euro) bid to cut wildlife trafficking in Africa.
But such sums are dwarfed by the potential profits from large scale shipments such as those that have recently been seized.
Ivory trade is banned under the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora (CITES).

~
Agence France-Presse
The Raw Story
July 12, 2013


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Thursday, July 11, 2013

From Farm Stands to Elephants

As a vegetable and herb farmer, embroiderer, golfer, and elephant lover, I figured out a way to incorporate all of these things into one activity. I am saving up for a trip to Africa (hopefully soon!) so I can work with the elephants!

I am selling: 
-Lavender filled, embroidered eye pillows (handmade)
-Golf balls (gently used)
-Herbs (lavender, rosemary, thyme, oregano) fresh and dried 
-Apples (from my tree)


If you are interested in an eye pillow, please contact me!  I am happy to personalize pillows and mail them to you! 

My favorite!



 Golf flag with Mountain




My pillows!



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Wednesday, July 10, 2013

The Wildlife Conservation Society

The Wildlife Conservation Society is a group that saves elephants and hippos.  The WCS parks are the Bronx Zoo, New York Aquarium, Central Park Zoo, Prospect Park Zoo, and the Queens Zoo, all located in New York State.  Organizations like these are part of what the elephants are depending on to survive.

Visit The Wildlife Conservation Society's website here.






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Tuesday, July 9, 2013

South Africa's "finite amount of space"

On the subject of endangered animals, we really need to manage our land better.  Governments from all over the world should come together to support South Africa as it continues to reintroduce elephants to their native habitats.  South Africa is suffering from a shortage of space for the elephants, and other African countries are greatly lacking an adequate elephant population due to poaching.  How can we solve this problem, other than giving the elephants birth control as described in this NPR news story?
You can also listen to this NPR broadcast!  Click here to listen.

ROBERT SIEGEL, HOST:
In many parts of Africa, elephants are threatened by poaching. But in South Africa, they're doing so well that some game reserves say they're overpopulated. Now, many of those reserves are trying to limit elephant reproduction even while some ecologists believe it's the wrong approach. Willow Belden reports.
WILLOW BELDEN, BYLINE: It's a sunny afternoon at Makalali Game Reserve. Giraffes graze at the edge of savannahs, wildebeests gather beneath flat-topped trees and elephants amble through leafy thickets. The reserve is home to all of South Africa's big game species, and visitors pay top dollar to go on safaris here. Amos(ph), a guide at the reserve, stops his jeep near an elephant herd.
AMOS: So the elephants, they eat 24 hours. Wherever you find them, they will be eating.
BELDEN: And sure enough, the elephants wander from tree to tree, wrap their trunks around branches and pull off huge mouthfuls of leaves. Sometimes they even knock over a tree to reach high-up branches. The animals at Makalali seem to be living in the wild, but this is a fenced-in reserve, and the wildlife is closely managed. Most notably, many of the elephants are on birth control. Audrey Delsink is in charge of them. She explains that when elephants were reintroduced to Makalali in the 1990s, their population ballooned.
AUDREY DELSINK: And it's simply because the resources are so phenomenal. You know, elephants hadn't been here for many, many years, and so their vegetation is ideal. In most instances, there's artificial water, and so this just makes for wonderful breeding grounds.
BELDEN: Those conditions are common in South Africa. The elephants all live in parks and game reserves where there's almost no poaching, few predators and abundant water. So the animals live long and multiply quickly. Henk Bertschinger, an expert in veterinary science and animal reproduction from the University of Pretoria, says the problem with that is that game reserves have a finite amount of space.
HENK BERTSCHINGER: And if you don't control the elephant numbers, they're going to destroy the habitat.
BELDEN: Destroy the habitat, as in eat every plant in sight. But controlling elephant numbers is tricky. Sending the animals away is rarely an option because South Africa's parks are full and moving them to other countries would be expensive and a political nightmare. So many game reserves are opting for contraception. Some are vasectomizing elephant bulls. Others, like Makalali, are using birth control on the females. In many cases, they still let the elephants have some babies so as not to mess up herd dynamics, but birth rates are low, and there have been no behavioral changes.
But some experts say tinkering with elephant reproduction is misguided. Rudi Van Aarde heads the Conservation Ecology Research Unit at the University of Pretoria. He says South Africa doesn't have too many elephants, just insufficient space, and he says micromanaging elephant numbers is treating the symptoms of the problem when we should be treating the causes.
RUDI VAN AARDE: When you have a toothache, you don't take a painkiller. You may take it for an hour or two days or whatever, but you go and see a dentist, and you solve the problem.
BELDEN: Van Aarde has pushed for the creation of ecological linkages, which allow elephants to move from one park to another. South Africa now offers incentives to landowners who let elephants travel through their property. They've also eliminated fences between certain parks and surrounding areas. One of those parks is Kruger, a national park the size of Denmark. Sam Ferreira is the park's large mammal ecologist. He points out a tree whose bark has been scraped away and says male elephants sometimes do that kind of damage just because they don't get to be dominant bulls who get to mate until they're in their 40s.
SAM FERREIRA: So what the hell do you do with yourself seriously sexually frustrated for 45 years?
BELDEN: In the past, Kruger managed elephants by killing entire herds. Now, instead of controlling elephants directly, park officials manage the landscape, for instance, by restricting water. Ferreira shows me a clearing with a water trough, fed from a well.
FERREIRA: All right. So this is an example of one of these places where we provide additional water to the animals. This is a functional one still. We've probably closed down about half of the existing ones that we had. There were up to 300 boreholes in the park.
BELDEN: Because the park has taken away some of these boreholes or man-made water holes, elephants have to travel longer distances to find water. As a result, more elephants die during droughts, and fewer elephants are born. Plus, the animals no longer spend all their time in one place.
FERREIRA: So that kind of variability is what we're after because that variability in how elephants use landscapes gives a tree a chance to actually recover.
BELDEN: And indeed, in most parts of Kruger, the vegetation is plentiful, and you have to look closely to see elephant damage. Ferreira says that's an indication that the park service's new approach of restoring natural processes rather than manipulating elephant numbers directly is working. And, in fact, he expects this method to become the new norm for wildlife management not just in South Africa but also in neighboring countries. For NPR News, I'm Willow Belden.
~Willow Belden
All Things Considered, NPR News
July 8, 2013

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Monday, July 8, 2013

Dr. Iain Douglas-Hamilton Saving The Elephants

If you cannot access this video, click here!

Take a few minutes to watch this interesting video that explains how Dr. Iain Douglas-Hamilton saves the elephants!

To read more about Dr. Iain Douglas-Hamilton, click here for a previous post from December.



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Saturday, July 6, 2013

The Child's Elephant

As an avid reader, I am always excited to come across a good new book.  Now, imagine how happy I am to find a book about elephants!  I am thrilled! The Child's Elephant by Rachel Campbell-Johnston is about  a boy who adopts an orphaned elephant calf, who lost it's mother due to poaching.   


Thank you to The Guardian for reviewing this must-read! 





It is safe to assume that Rachel Campbell-Johnston loves poetry. Given that she has a PhD in the stuff and a job as a poetry and art critic for the Times, it is hardly surprising that her first novel for children, set in the African savannah, captures the rhyme and rhythm of life there. Packed with exquisite imagery, where night skies weep shooting stars and flamingo flocks scatter "like wisps of sunset", The Child's Elephant is a hard-hitting but lyrical tale of survival against the odds.

We start with a bang – quite literally. A gunshot is fired and Bat, a young herdsboy, stumbles upon some poachers who have killed an elephant for its tusks. Horrified by the sight of the dead animal rising "like a mountain from a lake of purplish blood", Bat vows to look after the elephant's orphan, a pitiful creature flailing about in the bushes. With the help of his feisty friend, Muka, Bat half-walks, half-drags the young elephant back to his village of Jambula, where it takes up residence in his grandmother's hut. Christened Meya by the village's toothless chief because "it is the name that we give to those we most love", the elephant becomes a village favourite.
After an explosive start, the novel simmers down to focus on day-to-day life. Though the writing is always superb, the story sometimes drags under the weight of so much poetic description. I enjoyed it, basking in the slow, heavy style like a lion in the heat of the African sun, but I suspect others might lose patience. Lengthy passages detailing the sights, smells and sounds of the savannah will leave some children desperate for a bit of dialogue or action to speed up the narrative.
But hang in there, because a storm cloud is brewing. The first rumblings of danger – rumours of a rebel force abducting children to fight as soldiers – rouse the villagers' concern and the readers' interest. Strange voices are heard. A cow is stolen. A child goes missing. "They are coming closer," a neighbour whispers. "And they say that there's nothing the government can do about it." The growing unease is well handled, the shift in mood subtle but sinister. Well captured, too, is Bat and Muka's heartbreak at having to say goodbye to their elephant when she is ready to be released into the wild.
The two children are kidnapped and taken hundreds of miles to a training camp, based loosely on those of The Lord's Resistance Army in Northern Uganda, where Campbell-Johnston spent some time interviewing former child soldiers. She puts the research to good use. The camp has more than an air of authenticity; it reeks of it, and the cruelty is all the more powerful and shocking for that. Needing cash for supplies, the camp leaders recruit Bat to hunt down elephants for poachers to cut off their tusks. If he disobeys, he will be killed, and our hero is faced with the impossible decision to save himself or the majestic animals that he has come to love.
The Child's Elephant has the feel of a great epic. Not just a tale of two children fighting to survive, this is a big and important story about war, love, loss and the enduring power of friendship in the most brutal of circumstances. The slow-burn plot may not suit some readers, but those who persevere will be rewarded with a novel that smoulders in the mind long after the final page.

~Annabel Pitcher
The Guardian
July 5, 2013



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Friday, July 5, 2013

We're All Connected

If you cannot access this video, click here.



We're all connected, so let's act like it.  The decisions that we humans make affect wildlife on a daily basis, so make good ones! 



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Thursday, July 4, 2013

Elephants In Heat Waves

This heat wave we're having got me thinking about the climate in which African elephants live.  In 2011, at least 77 elephants died from a heat wave in Zimbabwe with temperatures at 104 degrees!  East of San Francisco, where I live, we exceeded that 104 degree mark; temperatures were approaching 110!  In conclusion, elephants are affected by heat just like us, water is scarce worldwide, and the possibility climate change needs to be addressed. 

HARARE, Zimbabwe -- More than 77 elephants have died in a three-month heat wave that has dried up watering holes in western Zimbabwe, wildlife authorities said Wednesday
Rangers in the Hwange National Park have counted 18 calves and 21 adolescent elephants among the dead animals, the state Parks and Wildlife Authority said in statement. Elephant carcasses were found mainly in large areas of bush surrounding three tourism and conservation camps in Zimbabwe's biggest nature preserve.
Since September, Hwange National Park has seen temperatures soar to above 104 degrees Fahrenheit (40 C), far higher than annual averages.
"Our information is that animals are dying of thirst right across the park," said Johnny Rodrigues, head of the independent Zimbabwe Conservation Task Force.
The Hwange National Park has no year-round rivers and little natural surface water, making it dependent on wells supplying artificial watering holes known as pans. An adult elephant needs nearly 50 gallons (200 liters) of water a day. But some watering holes have broken down because of scarce funding, the state wildlife authority said.
Rodrigues said voluntary animal welfare groups helped provide pumping equipment for some of the 60 watering holes in the preserve. Many now need replacement pumps and the underfunded state authority has failed to keep them maintained or buy spare parts and gasoline.
He said private conservation groups also installed solar pumps and windmills to draw water from the wells.
"There's very little wind at this time of year and the solar pumps can't provide the amount of water required by the number of animals reaching them" and overwhelming the pans, he said.
An estimated 30,000 elephants live in the massive preserve, along with giraffes, lions and most other game animals.

~Angus Shaw
Huff Post Green
November 23, 2011


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Wednesday, July 3, 2013

Tuesday, July 2, 2013

Guess What the Elephant is Thinking!

Want to know what an elephant is feeling!? This fun video shows different elephant behaviors- adults and calves!  I can't wait to put these fun facts to use!  







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Monday, July 1, 2013

Weapons For Science

"Each year, about 30,000 elephants are killed for their tusks, with most of them ending up in China and the United States. There are only about 420,000 African elephants remaining in the wild." 
It's funny.  A few weeks ago, I posted an article about how poachers are using old war weapons to kill the elephants.  Now, scientists have figured out a way to test how old the ivory is and whether or not it was poached legally.  Using nuclear weapons.
This story is remarkable! Please read below!
People watch as a backhoe crushes confiscated smuggled elephant tusks at the Ninoy Aquino Parks and Wildlife Center in Quezon City, Philippines, in June. By measuring radioactive fallout deposited in elephant tusks, conservationists can now determine the year ivory was obtained, and therefore its legality.
Erik De Castro/Reuters/File

Researchers have come upon a new tool in the fight against poaching of elephants, rhinos, hippos, and other endangered wildlife: nuclear weapons.
No, they're not launching nuclear missiles at the poachers, a tactic that even the most passionate conservationists would probably deem excessive. Instead, they're using the fallout from above-ground nuclear tests to determine the ivory's age, and thus its legality.
Here's how it works: Beginning with the Trinity test on July 16, 1945,and continuing until the Partial Test Ban Treaty was signed in 1963, the United States, Russia, China, France, and the United Kingdom detonated hundreds of thermonuclear devices above ground. Neutrons hurtling from these blasts fused with nitrogen in the air to form a heavy, radioactive isotope of carbon. Known as carbon-14, this isotope quickly dispersed throughout the atmosphere, where it then made its way into plants, animals, and whatever tusks, teeth, and horns they might have.
Since then, the amount of carbon-14 has been steadily declining, with most of it soaked up into the oceans. In 15 years or so, atmospheric concentrations will return to pre-atomic levels.
But for now, these microscopic Cold War relics allow scientists to precisely date tusks, teeth, and horns, according to research appearing in the current issue of the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
It's a bit like counting the rings on trees, except that you measure the amount of carbon-14 at various points along the length of the ivory. By comparing them with carbon-14 measurements from samples whose age is known, scientists now say they can determine the time of the animal's death within about a year, as long as it was killed after 1955.
International treaties banned ivory from Asian elephants after 1975 and from African elephants after 1989. In the United States, ivory is legal if it was imported before 1989, or, if it was imported after 1989, it must be at least 100 years old.
Yet until now, there has been no way to refute dealers who say their ivory predates the bans.
"With an accurate age of the ivory, we can verify if the trade is legal or not" said Kevin Uno, the study's lead author, in a press release. Dr. Uno did this research for his doctoral dissertation at the University of Utah. 
Each year, about 30,000 elephants are killed for their tusks, with most of them ending up in China and the United States. There are only about 420,000 African elephants remaining in the wild. 
The study's authors say that the test can be performed for about $500. 

~ Eoin O'Carroll
The Christian Science Monitor
July 1, 2013


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