Wildlife Asia Walkathon- the Asian Rhino Project collaborates to raise money for endangered species
The Australian Orangutan Project, Asian Rhino Project, Free the Bears and the Silvery Gibbon Project, all long standing Registered Australian Environmental Organisations, have joined to form a new umbrella organisation called ‘Wildlife Asia’. The primary objective of Wildlife Asia is to increase conservation contribution, capacity and efficiency for wildlife conservation. We are holding our first fundraising event to launch this exciting new partnership on Sunday 18th March 2012 in Perth. Please visit our events page http://www.asianrhinos.org.au/index.php/events/to find out more details.
Read more >> Added: Thu Feb 2012
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Wildlife Asia Walkathon- the Asian Rhino Project collaborates to raise money for endangered species
The Australian Orangutan Project, Asian Rhino Project, Free the Bears and the Silvery Gibbon Project, all long standing Registered Australian Environmental Organisations, have joined to form a new umbrella organisation called 'Wildlife Asia'. The primary objective of the Wildlife Asia is to increase conservation contribution, capacity and efficiency for wildlife conservation. We are holding our first fundraising event to launch this exciting new partnership on Sunday 18th March 2012 in Perth. Please visit our events page http://www.asianrhinos.org.au/index.php/events/to find out more details.
Read more >> Added: Thu Jan 2012
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Rhinos given fake horns- 22 Dec 2011
A Swiss museum has taken the drastic step of replacing the horns of its rhinos with fakes to deter thieves fuelling a lucrative global trade.
Read more at http://www.nzherald.co.nz/world/news/article.cfm?c_id=2&objectid=10774696
Read more >> Added: Wed Jan 2012
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1 in 4 mammals are at risk of extinction- IUCN warns
27th November 2011 – The good news: conservation works. The flipside: wildlife is so fragile that some of it may be lost forever.
This, according to the latest updated Red List released this month by the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN).
The Red List, with more than 61,900 species reviewed, is the world’s definitive watchlist of species. It is a rich compendium of information on the threats to the species, their ecological requirements, where they live and information on conservation actions that can be used to reduce or prevent extinctions.
According to the Red List, despite conservation programs, one out of four mammals are at risk of extinction.
For example, the reassessments of several rhinoceros species show that the Western Black Rhino in western Africa is extinct. The Northern White Rhino in central Africa is now on the brink of extinction and has been listed as possibly extinct in the wild.
The Javan Rhino is also making its last stand and is probably extinct, following the poaching of what is thought to be the last in Vietnam in 2010.
Although this is not the end of the Javan Rhino, it does reduce the species to a single, tiny and declining population on Java, Indonesia.
The main threats: lack of political support and will power for conservation efforts in many rhino habitats, international organized crime groups targeting rhinos and increasing illegal demand for rhino horns and commercial poaching.
"In the case of both the Western Black Rhino and the Northern White Rhino the situation could have had very different results if the suggested conservation measures had been implemented," says Simon Stuart, Chair of the IUCN Species Survival Commission. "These measures must be strengthened now, specifically managing habitats in order to improve breeding performance, preventing other rhinos from fading into extinction."
Read more >> Added: Tue Dec 2011
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