The risk of extinction
#1
Posted 2013-March-06, 13:02
The rhino in my own country is being poached for its horn at an alarming rate. Last year the tally was close to 700. We are now in early March and the tally already stands at 110. If this rate continues it too will be extinct soon.
The great white shark, to the best of my knowledge is also on the endangered list.
Not to mention the polar bear, the tiger, the panda, et el.
The Sumatran rhino was poached to extinction in 2011.
A sign of the times? A way of survival to many in an overpopulated world where growing job shortages are a huge problem? Greed? Something else?
#2
Posted 2013-March-06, 13:53
32519, on 2013-March-06, 13:02, said:
Supply and Demand. There is a demand and there is a supply, simple economic forces that have played out countless times before throughout history. Nothing particular about the economic times, someone will always work to see to it that demand gets its supply.
If history is a guide; demand will remain long after supply gives up the ghost, dooming the species in the wild. You can protect them 24/7 with armed guards, but that is just delaying the inevitable and leaves quite a lot to be desired for the idea of them living in the wild.
#3
Posted 2013-March-10, 08:32
http://www.salon.com..._rhino_partner/
Might be a reasonable way to go on the rhino front.
(I do wonder how much land would be required to farm a reasonable number of rhinos)
#4
Posted 2013-March-10, 09:02
Quote
Apparently rhinos are being poached so the tusk can be used in dagger handles. And drugs get used because people are idiots. One would like to dry up the demand but for reasons that are simply beyond my understanding, apparently this cannot be done. It's very discouraging.
#5
Posted 2013-March-13, 18:59
#6
Posted 2013-April-27, 03:13
dwar0123, on 2013-March-06, 13:53, said:
If history is a guide; demand will remain long after supply gives up the ghost, dooming the species in the wild. You can protect them 24/7 with armed guards, but that is just delaying the inevitable and leaves quite a lot to be desired for the idea of them living in the wild.
The supply will soon be completely exhausted. Check this out and this.
The Kruger National Park, a prime tourist attraction, is down to its last handful of rhinos. People are already making sick jokes such as, “Join the last rhino sight seeing tour.”
#7
Posted 2013-April-27, 13:29
32519, on 2013-April-27, 03:13, said:
The Kruger National Park, a prime tourist attraction, is down to its last handful of rhinos. People are already making sick jokes such as, “Join the last rhino sight seeing tour.”
I lived in South Africa from 97-2000 and was blown away by their committment to saving Cheetahs or anything else. It's such an amazing place that a fisherman from Port Elizabeth caught a Coalecynthe that was thought to be extinct for 10 Mil years. The Scientists took over and found a few hundred of them.
Hmm. A first class technical capability and people who care got my attention and if they come asking for anything to avert whatever, I would give them a blank check.
What is baby oil made of?
#8
Posted 2013-April-29, 00:00
I just had hopes that no other western country had a government so mindnumbingly focussed on getting a dollar no matter it costs, as we do.
#9
Posted 2013-May-24, 09:54
#10
Posted 2013-May-26, 22:52
#12
Posted 2013-November-30, 11:02