Earth Policy News - Primates Disappearing, March 5, 2002, Copyright Earth Policy Institute 2002
OUR CLOSEST RELATIVES ARE DISAPPEARING
www.earth-policy.org/Updates/Update7.htm
Janet Larsen
After more than a century of no known primate extinctions, scientists recently
confirmed the disappearance of a subspecies of a West African monkey. The loss of
this monkey, known as Miss Waldron's red colobus, may be a harbinger of future
losses of our closest evolutionary relatives.
Out of some 240 known primate species, 19 are critically endangered, up from 13
in 1996. This classification refers to species that have suffered extreme and rapid
reductions in population or habitat. Their remaining numbers range from less than a
few hundred to, at most, a few thousand individuals. If their populations continue
to shrink at recent rates, some species will not survive this decade. This group,
according to the World Conservation Union's 2000 IUCN Red List of Threatened
Species, includes 8 monkeys from Brazil's Atlantic rainforest, where 97 percent of
the forest has been lost, 2 apes and a monkey from Indonesia, 3 monkeys from Viet
Nam, 1 each from Kenya and Peru, and 3 lemur species from Madagascar.
At the endangered level, the IUCN's next degree of threat, there are 46 primate
species, up from 29 in 1996. These species face a very high probability of extinction,
some within the next 20 years. An additional 51 species are listed as vulnerable.
These primates have slightly larger populations but still may disappear within this
century. Critically endangered, endangered, and vulnerable species together total
116, or nearly half of the 240 some primate species. See table
www.earth-policy.org/Updates/Update7.htm
When the last Ice Age ended 10,000 years ago, baboons outnumbered humans by at
least 2 to 1. If all non-human primate populations were counted together, including
the large populations of some of the smaller species, they dwarfed the human
population. Now that has changed. The development of agriculture allowed for rapid
human population growth, and about 2,000 years ago, humans--numbering 300 million--became
the most abundant of the primates. By 1930, the human population of 2 billion likely
outnumbered all other primates combined.
Today, at 6.1 billion and climbing, we are threatening the survival of many of our
primate cousins, including our closest living relatives, the chimpanzees and bonobos,
with which we share over 98 percent of our genome. The other apes are quite close to
us as well, not only genetically, but also in observed behavior. Yet with the
300,000 human babies born each day exceeding the total population of the great apes,
even our evolutionary proximity may not prevent us from eradicating our near-kin.
While humans now inhabit every corner of the earth, most other primates exhibit
strong endemism, meaning that a species is restricted to a particular area. Almost
three quarters of all primates live in just four countries: Brazil, the Democratic
Republic of the Congo (formerly Zaire), Indonesia, and Madagascar. In each of these
countries, forest cover is decreasing. Because habitat loss is a danger to 90 percent
of threatened primates, their concentration in a few countries greatly increases their
vulnerability.
In Indonesia, diverse forests and wild inhabitants have suffered from logging
fueled by corruption and political instability. Within the past decade, deforestation
rates doubled, claiming almost 2 million hectares each year. As deforestation rates
doubled, orangutan numbers dropped by half. By 2005, the country faces the loss of
all lowland forest from Sumatra, and thus the extinction of the critically endangered
Sumatran orangutan, among many other species. The Borneo orangutan, after suffering
from logging, hunting, and the catastrophic fires of 1997, is not likely to survive
beyond 2010 if current trends continue.
Our closest relative, the bonobo, is endemic to the Congo, a country plagued by
civil war and occupation by foreign military and rebel groups. Along with many other
primates in the region, the slow-breeding bonobo has seen a rapid decline. In 1980
there were close to 100,000 bonobos; now there may be fewer than 10,000.
Although the civil war has created millions of human refugees and may have elevated
the demand for meat from wild animals (bushmeat), the resulting sluggish economic
development may have slowed logging in the Congo, the country containing half of
Africa's remaining tropical moist forests. If political stability returns, tree
cutting could increase several fold in the next few years, accelerating what could
be the first great ape extinction.
Gorilla populations have dropped to dangerously low levels, largely from illegal
commercial bushmeat hunting. Fewer than 325 mountain gorillas exist, and all are in
one subpopulation spanning Rwanda, the Congo, and Uganda. The rarest, the Cross River
Gorilla, is limited to only 150 to 200 individuals scattered among several lingering
subpopulations on the Cameroon/Nigeria border region.
In parts of West and Central Africa, hunting is an even greater threat than
forest loss. There the bushmeat trade, consisting primarily of forest antelope, pigs,
and primates, is worth over $1 billion a year. In areas where social turmoil has
ravaged traditional economic activities, and the average annual family income is
less than $100, the lure of earning $300 to $1,000 each year as a hunter has enticed
many. Logging and, to a lesser extent, mining companies have penetrated forests,
with their settlements increasing bushmeat demand, while their roads facilitate
hunting. Exploitative hunting is not profitable in the long term, however, because wild
populations, especially those of the large and slow-reproducing apes, are soon
decimated. Over 1 million tons of wild meat is consumed annually in the Congo Basin,
almost 6 times more than the forests' sustainable yield. Commercial hunting has
emptied forests that were once full of animals.
Though rural communities have long subsisted on wild animals and other forest
foods, with up to 60 percent of their protein coming from bushmeat, most bushmeat
from this region is now consumed in cities. Almost half of the
30 million people living in the forested regions of Central Africa are city-dwellers
who are being fed with bushmeat from collapsing wildlife
populations. As cities grow and bushmeat hunting accelerates to meet rising demand,
it is estimated that hunting could eliminate all viable African ape populations in
fewer than 20 years.
To save other primates from being lost in what is considered the earth's sixth
major extinction event, resources are needed to curb illegal logging and hunting.
Illegal logging has ruined vast stretches of original primate habitat. Much of the
bushmeat hunted comes from protected areas, and international trade in primates is
already unlawful under the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species.
But when enforcement is lacking, illegal practices continue. Large wilderness blocks of biologically rich areas can be converted to new parks
that take into account the needs of wildlife and human populations. Ecotourism
endeavors can be used to support primate conservation, and hunters can find
alternative income in park protection work once they realize that live animals can
be much more valuable than dead ones.
Understanding ourselves better--our biology, psychology, and sociology--depends
in part on understanding our closest living relatives better. If we destroy them, we
may never fully understand ourselves. |