The number of elephants and rhinos are declining in nations where animals are housed on national parks and rising in nations where the animals are privately owned and farmed by individuals due to property rights and private goods. Most nations where elephants and rhinos are housed on national parks a common ownership has been established by the government and the responsibility for these animals is not individualized by any one person, thus, the proper care that is needed is not delivered. However, in nations where individuals are allowed to own elephants and rhinos, responsibility is clear and maintenance is adhered. Nations were there are individual owners the stakes for healthy animals are much higher and necessary.…
Chapter two: Explain why incentives matter. What you think about the author’s ideas on black rhino conservation? Explain what perverse incentives are and give examples from a high school student’s life.…
Christy provides some well-placed photos throughout his article, but his description of what occurs while poaching is what really allows him to reach the reader. He explains, "Rhinos don't roar when they're injured. They keen. A shot mother will cry in pain, sometimes inadvertently causing her frightened baby to return to her. Poachers will sever a baby's spine with a machete to save a bullet, then take its horn too." Through his introduction of baby rhinos, he makes it difficult for the reader not to feel sympathetic towards his cause. Christy then takes that one step further by introducing Markus Hofmeyr, manager of veterinary services, who recalls what he witnessed one day. They emphasize the fact, "Cutting a horn too close to its growing point can cause bleeding and, veterinarians say, can be painful. Hofmeyr speculated that some horns had been removed 'by inserting a knife and separating the attachment area of the horn from the base of the skull or applying a large force and tearing the horn from the base.'" Hofmeyr was describing what he saw at Prachtig, where the bodies of several dead rhinos were uncovered with their horns missing. It is through his recollection of that day, along with Christy's description of the fate of baby rhinos that really close out his argument and leave a lasting impression on the…
Many of the rare species being poached by Transnational Organized Crime groups are endanger of being wiped off the face of the planet forever. Government corruption, weak laws, and next to no punishment for poaching allows for these crimes to continue around the world. For Crime groups the risk is low and rewards are high, especially when the poachers are poor locals, which are typically the persons jailed for the offenses. Poachers do many things to an environment when they over harvest plants and animals that can have divesting impacts across that area. The altering of livelihoods of the locals who can depend on the plants and animals poached for their own survival where they live. The poaching can have massive effects on other species that live and breathe in those eco-systems which in turn can have wider effects on nature. The introduction of wildlife into an eco-system can be invasive toward other species. “For example pet Burmese pythons let loose by their owners are now considered a major pest in Florida’s everglades.” (2015). And lastly, the killing of other species, incidentally, while targeting endangered species can affect…
Sport or trophy-hunting is defined as, “People willing to pay big money to kill animals, the thinking goes, the private sector has a strong motivation to make sure at least some of them remain alive.” The article also declared, “...as long as hunters are willing to travel to challenging and remote places, the industry provides conservation…” (Dymoke). This evidence helps prove that the government wants to capitalize the fact that they have a unique animal, however they don’t want to hunt it, and others, to extinction. Another article states, “As hard as it is to accept that killing animals can be integral to their survival, the fact remains: without trophy-hunting, many of Africa’s iconic species would be worse off,” to elaborate further, it states, “South Africa’s white rhinos numbered only 1,800 when trophy-hunting started there in 1968. Today there are almost 20,000” (Knight).…
How do you feel about lions? Do you want them to be extinct? If we continue this type of hunting, every lion that you have ever seen will be gone. Also, this includes tigers, elephants, rhinos, and many more. Big Game Trophy Hunting is a danger to the environment due to population. You might say “Hunting provides food for us,” or “This helps keep the populations under control.” All of this might be true, but populations would even rise more if we kept…
Hunters obey the laws enacted to protect the animals including game and non game animals. Hunters respect the animal they are hunting. It is fair chase and the animal becomes food for the Hunter and his/her family. Like it or not, we by nature are predators. AS of nowhunters, are the most efficient way to keep animal population under control. Since we have intruded into the animals area, there is less room and natural food for large populations. Larger populations means disease and hunger. Poachers kill animals illegally. They do not obey the laws. They kill for profit because some PEOPLE like to buy the tusk, furs, etc of non game and protected animals. Don't put the blame on Hunters, but the buisness owners that finance the Poachers with their illegal…
Africa is in the middle of a growing epidemic elephant slaughter. This growing slaughter began in 2002 and is currently happening till this day. Conservation groups share that elephant poachers are killing tens of thousands of elephants every year, which is more than at any time since the “Ivory Wars” has started. Recently in Garamba National park, Paul Onyango says that he has never seen anything like this before. 22 elephants were killed with a single shot to the head, including several young elephants as well. The reasons for the slaughtering is that poachers sell the animals tusks which have ivory in them.…
1. What is SANParks / Kruger National Park’s objective and vision? Is selling rhino consistent with their objective and vision? If not, then what should it be?…
Hunters should hunt for food, not just for the thrill of it. The number of animals in the world has declined by 95 percent in the last century. Some hunters kill just for fun. Hunting for fun is different than hunting for food. If a person is doing it for fun it is just killing an animal that did not do anything to them. Some animals that are extinct are tigers, rare leopards, deer, and a lot of other animals . Hunting just for trophies is wrong. when you hunt you should hunt for food, not just for the trophies or money. There needs to be more protection of endangered animals in Africa from foreign hunters.…
If you don’t care about animals, think about ourselves! Poaching can end up harming us in the long run! If poaching is to continue in the future, we will lose many magnificent animals, and our environment will end up becoming a gray, always foggy world, where there will be no sky, only gray. Wildlife will die, and nothing will be worth anything anymore on earth. Nature is priceless, and definitely more important than having the dead heads of animals! Help us stop poaching, and helps us make laws more strict on Poaching so we can reduce it as much as possible. For more info,…
Poaching is not only illegal but is cruel to animals, but is only illegal in government bought land, land owned by the government. The only reason why people started poaching is because tiger pelt and elephant tusks are good money in the BLACK MARKET. Poaching is increasing directly and helping criminal gangs become better at shootings and makes them more sophisticated. Terrorists are starting to sell ivory tusks to get more money to get more weapons and support their own terror.…
I agree with them to an extent because culture is the identity of every nation and as identity is very important no country will be willing to lose its culture. If these species are non-endangered, then I personally don’t see the reason why the US is meddling in their affairs. It is an unfair for the US to take advantage of their position in world to try and impose sanction on harmless nations such as Norway who has an exemplary record on environmental preservation. If America claims to be democratic and just then it is only prudent to allow these two nations to preserve their culture.…
In the case of hunting for trophy, it should be justifiable because it can help save wildlife by limiting the amount of killing and keeping track of it. One example of this is “Though counterintuitive, the view that legal trophy hunting has a role to play in the conservation of wildlife has many adherents. As long as people are willing to pay big money to kill animals, the thinking goes, the private sector has a strong motivation to make sure at least some of them remain alive.”(Alex Dymoke).It proves how having trophy hunting makes sure that some animals stay alive compared to them all being coming extinct. Another example is, “ South Africa’s white rhinos numbered only 1,800 when trophy hunting started there in 1968. Today they're almost 20,000.”(Emslie,Richard, and Michael Knight).…
The goal is not to tell people to fly to Africa and spend thousands of dollars, but to have a more positive outlook on a grim topic. If trophy hunting was to be made illegal, a large amount of revenue would be cut and many countries would lose funding to support conservation (Bas & Stuart, 2016). Biodiversity in Africa would then decrease greatly due to poaching and habitat…