Friday, 7 December 2018

Saving the last West African giraffes in Niger


4 December 2018
For almost 50 years, the highly threatened West African giraffe has been absent from Niger's Gadabedji Biosphere Reserve.
Illegal hunting, climate change and habitat loss have all contributed to the population's decline.
An ambitious conservation initiative has now re-introduced eight giraffes into the reserve, in the first conservation effort of its kind for the West African subspecies.
Under the initiative, spearheaded by the Nigerien authorities, the eight giraffes were captured in the country's Giraffe Zone, a government-defined region approximately 60km (37 miles) south-east of the capital, Niamey.
Until this move, the world's last West African giraffes had only been found in and near this Giraffe Zone.
There, West African giraffes share their habitat with local communities, and compete with them for space and natural resources.
The animals face a number of threats, including human population growth, hunting and agricultural encroachment.
Giraffes have now started to migrate out of the Giraffe Zone as a result of the growing population of both humans and giraffes themselves.
As a result, the animals have come into conflict with humans who are not used to their presence, and also stray into restive areas on the border with Mali.

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