http://news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story2&cid=624&u=/ap/20031128/ap_on_sc/un_saving_apes_2&printer=1

http://tinyurl.com/wy0h

 Poachers shoot them. Smugglers sell their babies as exotic pets. Illegal
loggers wipe out the rain forests where they live. And civil wars drive them
away.


The great apes - gorillas, chimpanzees, bonobos and orangutans - are in
great danger, the United Nations said as its environment and cultural
agencies ended a meeting Friday on how to protect the closest relative to
humans in the animal world.


The three-day talks in Paris drew representatives from 18 countries for what
organizers said was the most wide-ranging meeting ever on endangered great
apes. They worked out a global strategy to prevent poaching and illegal
trade, while encouraging education and ecotourism.


The agencies say they urgently need at least $25 million for programs to
save the apes from the threat of extinction.


"We may need a much larger sum, certainly in the hundreds of millions, if
we're going to guarantee saving these animals," said Robert Hepworth of the
United Nations Environment Program.


The great apes share more than 96 percent of their DNA with humans.


"If we can't save these species which are so close to us ... do we have very
much hope with some of the other particularly threatened species and
ecosystems?" Hepworth said.


Today, there are believed to be about 400,000 great apes in Africa and Asia,
compared to many million in the 19th century, the U.N. says. Each of the
species is at "high risk" of extinction, some soon, others within 50 years,
organizers said.


"The writing is very much on the wall: We have within the next 15 to 20
years to halt that decline," said Ian Redmond, head of the technical support
team for the U.N.'s Great Apes Survival Project.


In Senegal, there are only 200-400 chimpanzees left in the wild. In Ghana,
there are 300-500 left, and Guinea Bissau has fewer than 200. Research shows
that chimpanzee populations have already disappeared from Benin, Gambia and
Togo.


Because the apes live in such remote areas, their habitats are often hard to
map. The United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization is
working with the European Space Agency to use satellites or remote sensing
to track where ape habitats are being destroyed.


At the meeting, UNEP and UNESCO put together a plan on how countries can
protect their apes. Among the suggestions was giving law enforcement more
resources to prevent smuggling.


The agencies are also encouraging countries to think about ways in which
apes are an asset. Uganda and Rwanda have made apes the center of their
tourism industries. Travelers pay about $100 for a daylong guided walking
tour to see chimps - a small fortune in impoverished countries.


Apes tend the forests by spreading seeds and pruning branches. Along with
elephants, they are the "gardeners of the forests," Redmond said.



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Long term, the only way we are going to save the apes is to Uplift, train,
then arm them.



xponent

Planet Of The Apes Maru

rob



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