ZAMBEZI VALLEY
ELEPHANTS IN ZIMBABWE:
HORRIFIC
DECLINE IN NUMBERS SINCE 2001
4th August 2015
While the world’s media focuses its attention on illegal hunting
activities in Zimbabwe, centred on Cecil the lion, The Zambezi Society
wishes to highlight a wildlife crisis of even greater proportion
- the plight of Zimbabwe’s elephants in the Zambezi
Valley:-
- There has been a 75%
decline in the numbers of elephants in the Zambezi Valley south of
Lake Kariba (Sebungwe area) since 2001 - from 14,000 to 3,500.
- A 40% decrease has been
recorded in the middle Zambezi Valley complex (which includes Mana
Pools) - from 18,000 to 11,500.
These statistics derive from a national air survey conducted by experts
as part of the Africa-wide Great Elephant Census,
which surveyed all major elephant populations in Africa in 2014.
Kenyan-based Save the Elephants
recently highlighted a huge escalation in the demand and price of
elephant tusks in China since 2002. China’s legal ivory trade, it
believes, is acting as a smokescreen for horrific escalation of illegal
activities which are driving the unsustainable killing of Africa’s
elephants.
A recent census in Tanzania revealed a catastrophic 60% loss of that
country’s elephants in just five years (109,051 in 2009 to 43,330 in
2014). Mozambique has lost around 50% in the same period from
20,000 to 10,300.
In Africa (and Zimbabwe is no exception), state wildlife authorities
are unable to provide sufficient policing and protection of wildlife
areas. The costs of protection are high, but government funds
allocated for the purpose are negligible. This gap is exploited
by corruption. Rangers on the ground, in general, are highly
experienced but poorly paid.
Your support is critically needed to assist with this critical human
resource and will strengthen their motivation, resolve and performance.
Says The Zambezi Society: “We
are deeply concerned by these latest elephant figures. The
message for Zimbabwe’s Zambezi Valley is clear – poaching is rife and
we need to do something about it urgently.”
As a follow-up to the Zimbabwe elephant census, two anti-poaching
workshops for the Middle Zambezi and the Sebungwe areas took place
recently. The Zambezi Society attended both and now sits on the
Task Force steering committees for each. The Society has
committed itself to work with Zimbabwe’s Parks and Wildlife Management
Authority (ZPWMA) to act on certain of the prioritised actions
resulting from these deliberations.
The Society has a Memorandum of Understanding with ZWPMA and a
30-year-old history of working with the Authority, other NGOs and the
private sector to assist in combating anti-poaching in the Zambezi
Valley. Funds channelled via the Zambezi Society are fully
accounted for and used in the most effective way possible.
Please help us to strengthen our anti-poaching efforts in the face of
this elephant crisis by making a contribution via The Zambezi Society’s
secure online payment system or via the newly-formed,
collaborative Zambezi Elephant Fund
of which the Zambezi Society is a partner.
For more information, contact
The Zambezi
Society
zambezi@iwayafrica.co.zw
www.zamsoc.org
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