Massive ivory tusks from legally hunted African elephants020 Archivesonce again be brought into the United States.
Although the Obama administration banned the importation of African elephant trophies in 2014, on Wednesday the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service confirmed with ABC Newsthat the ban had been lifted for Zimbabwe and Zambia, two nations with sizable elephant populations.
The decision to allow these ivory hunting prizes into the U.S. stokes much controversy. Safari big-game hunters, who engage in legal hunting of these animals, feel they should be able to keep the spoils of their sport. But conservationists, such as The Elephant Project, view this as a "pay to slay" tactic that will encourage more poaching of an intelligent, vulnerable species.
SEE ALSO: Three Connecticut elephants were just given lawyers, and the case sways on free willReprehensible behaviour by the Trump Admin. 100 elephants a day are already killed. This will lead to more poaching. https://t.co/rld67eM018
— The Elephant Project (@theelephantproj) November 16, 2017
African elephants — the planet's largest land mammals — are listed as threatened under the Endangered Species Act, which is managed by the Fish and Wildlife Service. The animals have been listed with that status since 1978.
According to the Great Elephant Census, undertaken by a team of ecologists and biologists who spent years surveying the expansive African savannah in airplanes, the population of African elephants decreased by 30 percent in 15 of 18 countries studied between 2009 and 2016, which include both Zambia and Zimbabwe.
African elephant populations have been particularly pressured by poaching for their ivory tusks, a demand that is only increasing. Since 2007, the ivory trade has doubled, according to the International Union for the Conservation of Nature (IUCN).
The Fish and Wildlife Service did not say what specific conditions had changed in Zimbabwe and Zambia to justify lifting the ban, but it did say more information about the decision would be posted in the Federal Register on Friday (the Federal Register is where the U.S. government officially publishes federal regulations).
A Fish and Wildlife spokesperson, however, stated the agency's general belief that legal sport-hunting can benefit conservation goals:
Legal, well-regulated sport hunting as part of a sound management program can benefit the conservation of certain species by providing incentives to local communities to conserve the species and by putting much-needed revenue back into conservation.
This latest decision, although limited to one species in two African nations, might signal the Trump administration's intent to increasingly use regulated sport hunting as an international wildlife conservation strategy.
Last week, the Department of the Interior — which oversees the Fish and Wildlife Service — announced the creation of the International Wildlife Conservation Council. The council will specifically "focus on increased public awareness domestically regarding conservation, wildlife law enforcement, and economic benefits that result from U.S. citizens traveling abroad to hunt," according to the announcement.
“Built on the backs of hunters and anglers, the American conservation model proves to be the example for all nations to follow for wildlife and habitat conservation,” Interior Secretary Ryan Zinke said.
Although the Endangered Species Act, one of the nation's most powerful conservation laws, has absolutely benefited once nearly extinct creatures like the Bald Eagle, 1,390 U.S. animals remain on the list as either threatened or endangered.
What Gershom Scholem’s Take on Jewish Mysticism Can Teach Us NowPour One Out for Branwell Brontë—the Guy Gets No RespectInside the Issue: Behind “No Home Go Home / Go Home No Home”What to Do When Your Patron Is a Multinational CorporationBlue Shores: On the Photography of Stephen ShoreEdward Albee Wanted His Unfinished Work to Be DestroyedHow a SilentFlatulence and Language in Yasujiro Ozu’s ‘Good Morning’The Origins of Hunter S. Thompson’s Loathing and FearCatherine Lacey Revisits Cy Twombly’s ‘Say Goodbye, Catullus’Charles and Ray Eames’ Films Shine a Light on Their Design PhilosophyThe Designs of the Jazz Age (It Wasn’t All Cocktail Shakers and Dresses)Walruses Were Once Magical Creatures, Prone to Suddenly Falling AsleepWill Progressive Rock Save Your Soul? (Hint: No)Pour One Out for Branwell Brontë—the Guy Gets No RespectCatherine Lacey Revisits Cy Twombly’s ‘Say Goodbye, Catullus’What to Do When Your Patron Is a Multinational CorporationBlue Shores: On the Photography of Stephen ShoreWhat an Abolitionist’s Letters Can Teach Us About Our Political MomentPoland vs. Georgia 2025 livestream: Watch U21 Euro 2025 for free St. Mark’s Saved by Lorin Stein Abstracts by Scott Treleaven On the Shelf by Sadie Stein L.A. Advice: Writers Dating, Fear of the Blank Page by Sadie Stein Cycling; Second The 27 Guy Fieriest Guy Fieri tweets of 2020, so far Part 1: The Amanuensis by Mark Van de Walle 'Godfather of AI' has quit Google to warn people of AI risks 'Quordle' today: See each 'Quordle' answer and hints for May 1 The Smartest Gifts of the Season by The Paris Review Cherchez la Femme by Jenny Hendrix Wordle today: Here's the answer and hints for May 3 Staff Picks: “Hadji Murat,” A Version of the Afterlife by The Paris Review Staff Picks: Barbie's Dream House, All the Single Ladies by The Paris Review Pulling Teeth; Cold Calling by Chris Flynn From the Cloakroom, at the Booker by Jonathan Gharraie Help Us Support St. Mark’s! by Natalie Jacoby Sacha Baron Cohen trolled a right Kids adorably crashed both BBC and Sky News live broadcasts today More From Our Southern Editor: House of Horrors by Lorin Stein
1.1546s , 8228.5625 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【2020 Archives】,Charm Information Network