Panorama
 
 
 
 
 

CENSUS FINDS INCREASE IN CRITICALLY ENDANGERED MOUNTAIN GORILLA POPULATION

Environmental Panorama
International
December of 2010


Posted on 07 December 2010
A census of the world’s largest mountain gorilla population has counted 480 animals, an increase of 100 - more than a quarter - since the last count in 2003.

The gorillas surveyed live in Central Africa’s Virunga Massif region, a volcanic mountain ecosystem consisting of three adjacent national parks spanning parts of Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC), Uganda and Rwanda.

A fourth park, southwestern Uganda’s Bwindi, is home to an additional 302 mountain gorillas, the only other remaining wild population, which together with four orphaned mountain gorillas in a sanctuary in the DRC brings the wild population to 786.

The Virunga census was conducted in March and April 2010 by local authorities with the support of the International Gorilla Conservation Programme (IGCP), a coalition of several conservation organizations, including WWF.

‘’This is vivid testimony to the commitment of the Rwanda, Uganda and DRC governments, in addition to their supporting partners including IGCP, to ensuring the sustained protection of this charismatic species,” said David Greer, African Great Ape Coordinator at WWF. “The survey results provide us with an excellent demonstration of how strong law enforcement efforts put in place to safeguard flagship species can advance species conservation, benefit local communities, and provide important revenue to governments.”

The current figure represents an annual growth rate of 3.7% in Virunga despite the illegal killing of no less than nine mountain gorillas in the area over the past seven years, according to IGCP. Of the gorillas surveyed, 352 have been habituated to human presence, 349 living in groups and three solitary silverback males. Habituated mountain gorillas have been the basis of a sustainable eco-tourism programme since the late 1970s.

“Unfortunately, as we continue efforts to replicate the successful mountain gorilla eco-tourism model elsewhere in Central Africa, weak government support for wildlife protection, rampant corruption and an uninviting tourism culture make for a much more challenging environment,” said Greer. “To date, no gorilla tourism programmes west of the Virungas have achieved fiscal success.”

“The mountain gorilla is the only one of the nine subspecies of African great apes experiencing a population increase. While we celebrate this collective achievement, we must also increase efforts to safeguard the remaining eight subspecies of great apes,” said Greer. “Elsewhere in African great ape range states, government support of wildlife law enforcement efforts is shockingly weak and great apes continue to be poached in an environment of pervasive, legal impunity.”

To conduct the Virunga census, over 1,000 kilometres were systematically walked by six mixed teams of seventy-two people from DRC, Rwanda, and Uganda. Teams covered the entire range and meticulously documented fresh signs of gorilla groups. Mountain gorillas make a new nest each night. Genetic analysis of fecal samples were collected and analyzed to identify and correct for any double-counting of individuals or groups, ensuring the most accurate estimate for the population.

''While the results of the survey are encouraging, many imminent threats continue to loom over great ape populations throughout Central Africa including commercial poaching to supply bushmeat to wealthy urbanites, habitat destruction through illegal logging and land conversion, and the spread of highly infectious diseases such as Ebola hemorrhagic fever," said Greer. "Moreover, the recent decision by the DRC government to open the Virunga National Park, Africa’s first National Park, a UN World Heritage Site, and DRC’s only home to the mountain gorilla, to oil exploration, is extremely disappointing and reveals that there is much progress to be made in balancing the need to maintain critical biodiversity regions in the face of competing government interests.''?

The Virunga Massif mountain gorilla census was conducted by the protected area authorities in three countries: L’Institut Congolais pour la Conservation de la Nature, the Rwanda Development Board and the Uganda Wildlife Authority. The census was supported by the International Gorilla Conservation Programme (a coalition of WWF, the African Wildlife Foundation, and Fauna & Flora International), the Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology, the Dian Fossey Gorilla Fund – International and the Mountain Gorilla Veterinary Project. The census was funded by WWF, Fair Play Foundation, and the Netherlands Directorate General for International Cooperation (DGIS) through the Greater Virunga Transboundary Collaboration.

Around 100,000 visitors a year come to the national park, about half from outside India.

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Wealthy, poor governments must unite on new source of funding to fight climate change - 4 Dec 2010

Posted on 04 December 2010
Cancun, Mexico – To move the current climate talks forward, both wealthy and poor governments must embrace innovative ways to pay for climate change adaptation and mitigation, and in particular back proposals to use untapped revenue from the shipping and aviation industries to fund these initiatives.

Governments taking part in the current United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) process have been making slow progress on finding ways to pay for a shift to a green economy that can also deal with the devastating effects of climate change.

In Cancun this week, much of the financing focus has been on the creation of a new global fund to address climate and how it will be managed.

While an agreement on how to make the fund operational is expected in Cancun, finding appropriate financing mechanisms for the fund – one acceptable to both rich and poor nations – is a key component of the talks that likely would help unlock the financing puzzle at the center of the negotiations.

Governments are considering proposals to raise revenue from the international shipping and aviation industry by either charging for emission permits or through levies on fuels,a currently unregulated sector. This approach can play a pivotal role in moving forward parts of the current talks deadlocked around how to pay for actions to fight climate change, WWF said.

“Negotiators must see this as a fair, doable opportunity for ready-made cash revenue that can generate guaranteed sums of public finance that in turn can be directed to climate adaptation and mitigation in developing countries,” said Gordon Shepherd, leader of WWF’s Global Climate Initiative. “Success in pursuing this approach would show that the UNFCCC process can cut through the gridlock of polarized positions and mistrust on how to fund global actions to fight climate change.”

“These are lean times, and this is an untapped revenue source – governments can turn political will to address a growing emission problem into cash by embracing this approach.”

An independent group of financial experts and senior officials, known as the UN Secretary General’s High Level Advisory Group (AGF), last month confirmed it was feasible to mobilize at least USD 100 billion to fund climate actions in developing countries.
The advisory group drew on proposals already being discussed by the International Maritime Organization and the UNFCCC aimed at avoiding placing an additional burden on developing countries while at the same time generating revenue from the global shipping and aviation sectors. The solution involves a rebate to developing countries reflecting their share of the goods shipped, to avoid a burden on them. The revenue attributed to developed countries will be channelled through a fund under the UNFCCC to support climate actions.

Already this week at the climate negotiations, some developing countries have criticized proposals to raise public money from the aviation and shipping industries, saying the so-called ‘Bunker’ financing plan – named after the shorthand for fuel used in the international transport industry - would restrict their economic growth.

In a paper released to delegates at the climate talks today, WWF said “one of the most promising innovative sources of public financing for adaptation and mitigation actions in developing countries is from measures to address emissions from international aviation and shipping.”

International aviation and shipping are large and fast-growing sources of emissions with no overall regulatory framework to control them, according to Financing from International Aviation and Shipping: Turning an Emissions Problem into a Revenue Opportunity.

“Policies to control them could pay a double dividend – reducing emissions but also unlocking major flows of climate finance.”

 
 

Source: WWF – World Wildlife Foundation International
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