A WWF report concludes:
- Poaching was likely the cause of death. The last rhino was found with a bullet in its leg and its horn removed.
- Ineffective protection by the park was ultimately the cause of extinction.
- Illegal hunting for wildlife trade continues to threaten many species in Vietnam including the tiger, Asian elephant and saola.
In 2004, a survey conducted by WWF, Cat Tien National Park and Queen’s University in Canada revealed at least two rhinos were living in the park. The report suggests that one of the individuals was lost between then and the beginning of WWF’s survey in 2009.
Hope for Javan rhinos in IndonesiaThere are still Javan rhinos left in the wild. As few as 40 critically endangered rhinos live in a small national park in Indonesia. The protection and expansion of this remaining population is crucial for the survival of the rhinos.
WWF is working to:
- protect the remaining Javan rhinos from poaching
- monitor the existing population
- establish a second population through translocation, which establishes different populations of a species in more than one area
Once again, we are killing other animals. We need to make a change.... One step in the right direction, was Tiger Summit, a gathering held in Russia by the prime minister regarding the populations of tiger. Every one of the seven remaining species of tiger has been declared extinct. The populations are being decimated by illegal poaching and habitat fragmentation. At Tiger Summit though, it was decided to stop encroaching on the natural habitat and more strongly enforce punishment on poaching. This was the largest meeting regarding a non-human issue. It's a step. But we can't just worry about the animal poster children. Species go extinct before we even discover them. Every life matters, from the tiniest lizard to the largest whale. Even the bugs... We have to care.
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