MAY 28,
2019
Elephant
poaching rates in Africa have started to decline after reaching a peak in 2011,
an international team of scientists have concluded.
However,
the team say the continent's elephant population remains
threatened without continuing action to tackle poverty, reduce corruption and
decrease demand of ivory.
The
research, which included scientists from the universities of Freiburg, York and
the Convention for the International Trade in Endangered Species (CITES),
reveals a decline in annual poaching mortality rate from an estimated peak of
over 10 % in 2011 to less than 4 % in 2017.
It is
estimated there are around 350,000 elephants left in Africa, but
approximately 10-15,000 are killed each year by poachers.
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