Published on October 22nd, 2009

Hyenas are not as numerous as you might think: Poison, guns, snares, sport hunting, and habitat loss due to human expansion are taking their toll on the misunderstood hyena.
Hyenas are the subject of perhaps more myths than any other African animal, which has unfortunately led to decades of persecution against these unusual creatures. The rapid expansion of human population into remaining hyena habitat - and the intentional killing of hyenas by humans - will eventually prove to be more than this resilient species can tolerate.
To help raise awareness of hyena conservation, here are 12 surprising things you didn’t know - plus a compilation of beautiful photos. Enjoy! Read the rest of this entry »
Tags:
aardwolf,
africa,
brown hyena,
conservation,
Crocuta crocuta,
habitat loss,
hyaena,
Hyaena hyaena,
hyena,
IUCN Hyaena Specialist Group,
middle east,
Parahyaena brunnea,
poisoning,
predator,
Proteles cristata,
spotted hyena,
striped hyena
Published on October 22nd, 2009

Imagine a spider about the size of a standard-sized CD! Researchers have discovered a rare super-sized spider.
Once thought to be extinct, the first Nephila komaci spider was first found in an old museum collection in South Africa in 2000. A few years later, another specimen was found at a museum in Austria. No other specimens were found until two females and one male were found in the Tembe Elephant Park in Africa. The discovery is the first new Nephila species since 1879. Read the rest of this entry »
Tags:
creepy crawlers,
endangered,
endangered spiders,
giant orb spider,
Nephila,
Nephila komaci,
new species,
orb weaving spider,
rare,
rare spiders,
South Africa,
spider,
web-spinner
Published on October 20th, 2009

Thanks to the controversial approval of a one-off ivory sale, illegal trade in ivory has been reinvigorated - and 100 elephants a day are being slaughtered.
The Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species (CITES) approved a one-off elephant ivory auction in 2008 of 119 tons (108 tonnes) - representing over 10,000 dead elephants - and this decision is believed to have stimulated the growing illegal ivory market.
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Tags:
africa,
baofahu,
china,
chinese,
CITES,
conservation,
elephant,
endangered species,
extinction,
International Fund for Animal Welfare,
ivory,
Kenya,
Kenya Wildlife Service,
one-off ivory auction,
poachers,
poaching
Published on October 19th, 2009

Yearly, 1.8 million people will die due to waterborne diseases. Sadly, most of these deaths are children under the age of 5, at rate of 5000 children a day. There is a way to reverse and end this tragedy. The Water Solution is available and saving lives in Africa. Imagine a small, portable, straw-like device that hangs around the neck of a child and each straw can save a child’s life for one year.
“WATER IS LIFE!” a child exclaims as he sees his siblings live instead of die. Genius inventions like these are changing the world on a global scale — saving lives and bringing children and families back into healthier states.
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Published on October 19th, 2009

A novel conservation project in Kenya’s Maasailand is employing the lion’s greatest enemy to conserve, rather than kill, lions.
In Maasailand, the biggest threat to lions is retaliatory and traditional spearing by Maasai warriors. However, an innovative approach to lion conservation is now paying Maasai warriors to protect lions.
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Tags:
conservation,
endangered species,
extinction,
habitat loss,
Kenya,
Kenya lions,
Laurence Frank,
Leela Haazah,
Lion Guardians,
lions,
Maasai,
Maasai warrior,
Maasailand,
murran,
overgrazing,
poisoning,
population decline
Published on October 15th, 2009

A young African white-backed vulture is preparing to undergo cataract surgery in hopes of restoring his eyesight.
In the first operation of its kind on any African vulture species, an 11-month-old Gyps Africanus diagnosed with advanced cataracts will hopefully be able to see the world around him, thanks to the vets at Onderstepoort Veterinary Institute.
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Published on October 15th, 2009

Today’s elephants are under increasing pressure from habitat loss (due to explosive human population growth), poaching for ivory, and illegal trafficking.
Asian elephants are classified as endangered, and their population is declining. African elephants are considered near threatened, but a resurgence in elephant poaching is taking its toll.
To help raise awareness for these magnificent mammals, here are 12 things you didn’t know about elephants - and a compilation of beautiful photos (with baby elephants who will steal your heart)! Enjoy! Read the rest of this entry »
Tags:
africa,
African elephant,
Asia,
Asian elephant,
china,
chinese,
conservation,
elephant facts,
elephant intelligence,
elephants,
Elephas maximus indicus,
Elephas maximus maximus,
Elephas maximus sumatrensis,
endangered,
habitat loss,
human overpopulation,
India,
Kenya,
lephas maximus borneensis,
Loxodonta africana,
Loxodonta cyclotis,
photo gallery,
poacher,
poaching,
Sri Lanka,
Thailand
Published on October 13th, 2009

As wild tiger populations dwindle, poachers are turning to lions to feed the insatiable Chinese appetite for ‘potions’ made from big cat bones.
Conservationists are sounding the alarm about a disturbing development in the fight to save wildlife from poaching: Lions are being killed as a substitute for tigers so their bones can be sold as Chinese “remedies.”
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Tags:
africa,
Asiatic lion,
china,
chinese,
conservation,
endangered species,
extinction,
Gir Forest,
India,
lion,
Panthera leo persica,
poachers,
poaching,
poisoning,
tiger,
Wildlife Protection Society of India
Published on October 9th, 2009

After a gun battle in Charara National park near Sanyati Gorge, park rangers shot and killed an elephant poacher, arrested three accomplices - and recovered an AK-47 rifle.
While out on patrol, two rangers stationed at Charara Safari Area and Tashinga National Parks came across the carcass of an elephant, who appeared to have been recently killed. As their regular rounds did not turn up any suspects, they decided to wait in ambush near the elephant’s carcass.
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Tags:
AK-47,
ambush,
Amonga Daniel,
Billy Kanwell,
Charara National Park,
elephant,
Morris Mutsambiwa,
poacher,
poaching,
Robert Musonda Mwenda,
Sanyati Gorge,
Tashinga National Parks,
Victor Sibangwe,
Zambia,
Zimbabwe
Published on October 8th, 2009

Well-funded poaching syndicates are cashing in on Asia’s demand for rhino horn - and jeopardizing decades of rhino conservation efforts in South Africa.
The reason behind the current 15-year high in rhino poaching is no longer a mystery or “baffling” to experts: It is fueled by the insatiable demands of a newly affluent - and increasing - population in Asia.
Commercial rhino poaching has become a well-oiled machine - and the “new Asian wealth” is bankrolling the slaughter.
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Tags:
africa,
Asia,
Ben Davies,
Black Market: Inside the Endangered Species Trade in As,
china,
chinese,
commercial rhino poaching,
conservation,
endangered species,
poacher,
poaching,
rhino,
rhinoceros,
Save the Rhino International,
South Africa,
superstition,
Vietnam,
vietnamese