Wild giraffes are not just dropping in
numbers at an alarmingly high rate–they’re doing so without much
attention from governments and other protective agencies, according
to a new report.
The population of wild giraffes has dropped
by 40% over the last 15 years, according to a new survey by the
Giraffe Conservation Foundation (GCF). The organization calls the
problem a potentially “silent extinction” due to a lack of public
awareness, which revolves around African elephants, rhinos and
gorillas, Mother Nature Network
report.
“Giraffes are the forgotten megafauna,”
GCF executive director Julian Fennessy told
scientific American.
“They’re really not getting the attention they deserve.”
The giraffe population has fallen due to
habitat destruction by humans repurposing land for agricultural uses,
according toMNN.
Giraffes have also historically been hunted for their durable,
patterned skin, a process that has reportedly increased in Tanzania
due to a myth that giraffe brains and bone marrow can cure HIV.
But giraffe conservationists hope the wild
giraffe population can be restored with some intervention. When the
West African giraffe nearly went extinct in the 1990s due to human
causes and droughts, conservationists won legal protection for the
animals, and their population has since increased five-fold.
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