Year of the Gorilla Ambassador in appeal at World Forestry Congress

Based on an article by Paula Scheidt Manoel.

Year of Gorilla Ambassador Ian Redmond said during the World Forestry Congress, recently held in Buenos Aires, that protecting animals and stopping bushmeat trade are not a matter of choice, but are actually an essential part of forest preservation. He stated: “Forests don’t have biodiversity, they ARE biodiversity. If we take out the animals, we are removing a key element of the forest life cycle”.

Animals are crucial for seed dispersal, as many plants can’t germinate without first passing through the digestive tract of species such as gorillas, elephants or birds. According to Redmond, 75% of forest depends on animals to maintain species richness and the natural cycle. More biodiversity, Redmond emphasized, also means a bigger capacity of the forest to overcome with adverse situations, such as changes in rain patterns that can occur as a result of global warming.

Hunting for bushmeat contributes strongly to the extinction or significant reduction of some species, among them gorillas. At the same time, in a number of tropical countries bushmeat is also an important source of protein for people. “In at least 62 countries, wild animals and fish constitute a minimum of 20% of the animal protein in rural diets”, says a bushmeat study by the UN Biodiversity Convention. In Central Africa alone, 30% to 80% of the total protein ingested by farmers comes from hunting.

Redmond explained that in places where there is a market for this meat nearby, it stimulates hunting. “The trade in bushmeat is leaving the forests empty. My hope is that some explicit statement about it would be made by countries if they decide to include a payment for the carbon store in the forests in the new climate deal”.

A new agreement to control global warming will be discussed at a United Nations summit this December in Copenhagen. One of the key points being negotiated is a mechanism to reduce deforestation in developing countries through financial incentives for forest protection from developed nations, called REDD (Reduction of Emissions from Deforestation and Forest Degradation).

Deforestation is highlighted by a global community of scientists as responsible for about 20% of total CO2 emissions, which they say is the main cause of the increase of temperatures. It adds up to 5.86 billion tons of carbon dioxide, as much as is emitted by the United States or China per year.

To read this and other articles online, go to http://www.climatemediapartnership.org/reporting/stories/gorilla-ambassador-demands-bushmeat-controls/

For more about YoG, visit www.yog2009.org

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4 Comments

  1. Anna M
    Posted November 11, 2009 at 8:01 am | Permalink

    Spot on !! This is a message that needs to be told loud and clear Ian has mention this on several occations on this blog and via other forums…. Is Ian attending the meeting in Copenhagen at all ?

  2. cliff
    Posted November 18, 2009 at 9:07 am | Permalink

    why dont people ever talk about the over population issues
    in africa
    This is where all these problems occur . If they dont find away
    to curb this ,there will be no more wild animals in the forest and its people have to go hungry as well, its not politaly
    correct to talk about over population the world main issues

  3. Posted November 19, 2009 at 9:12 am | Permalink

    Thank you for your conservation efforts. The year of the gorilla is already a success and most tourists on a uganda safari are already contributing to the conservation efforts because of your publicity!

  4. Posted December 8, 2009 at 7:07 am | Permalink

    Thanks for your supportive comment, Anna, and yes, I will be attending the Copenhagen Climate Conference for a week, including Forest Day 3, a parallel event which we hope will inform the negotiators with this and other important messages about tropical forest ecosystems. Do please keep reminding your own governments that primates and elephants and fruit bats and birds are not optional extras in forest ecosystems, they are integral to the health of the forest, which is integral to the health of the planet, and our future.
    Hope you’ll read lots of press coverage from CoPenhagen!
    Cheers,
    Ian

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