Guest guest Posted November 11, 2002 Report Share Posted November 11, 2002 > http://www.oregonlive.com/news/oregonian/index.ssf?/xml/story.ssf/html_stand > ard.xsl?/base/news/1036846744222170.xml > Portland groups are at center of gorilla dispute > 11/11/02 > MICHELLE COLE > Four baby gorillas captured illegally in the wilds of West Africa are at the > center of an international controversy involving zoologists, government > ministers and two Portland-based rescue organizations. > > > The three females and one male, ranging from 2 to 4 years old, remain in > limbo at the Taiping Zoo in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, while a debate about > their future is settled. > The Malaysian government has said it would send the animals back to Africa > if a suitable place can be found -- this following several months of > pressure from conservationists and the World Association of Zoos and > Aquariums. Among the top candidates as a suitable place, in Cameroon, is one > run by two former Portland residents. > The animals are in good health and are not on exhibit, a Taiping Zoo > official said last week. > But conservationists say they're concerned that the gorillas are traumatized > and vulnerable to disease. Developmentally, the young apes are not unlike > human toddlers. > There is support within the primate research and rescue community for > sending the animals to the Limbe Wildlife Centre in Cameroon. Limbe is > financed by the Portland-based Pandrillus Foundation and supported by the > Pan African Sanctuaries Alliance, another Portland-based organization. > The Limbe Wildlife Centre began as a colonial zoo. Today it is a primate > sanctuary and education center run by Peter Jenkins and Elizabeth Gadsby, > former Portlanders who went to Africa for an adventure 15 years ago and > stayed. > Pandrillus and the Pan African Sanctuaries Alliance have raised $30,000 to > help pay the estimated $200,000 cost of keeping the four animals at Limbe > over their lifetimes. Gorillas can live to be 40 years old. > Jenkins said it makes ethical and practical sense to send the gorillas to > Limbe. > " I'm almost certain that the gorillas came originally from Cameroon, and I > think it would be a bad precedent to set for animals not to go back to their > country of origin, " he said. " It's the best thing for the gorillas, I > believe, because it's the best place for them. " > Gorillas are found in mountain and low-lying forests in nine African > countries. At one time, their population was estimated at more than 100,000. > But surveys indicate the numbers are declining as gorillas are hunted and > forests are transformed into agricultural fields or cities. > Hunting or capturing the animals is illegal in Uganda, Rwanda, Congo, > Cameroon, Nigeria and Gabon. A global treaty that governs ivory trade and > other activities, called the Convention on Trade of Endangered Species of > Wild Fauna and Flora, also bans the hunting or trapping of apes. > But neither hunting laws nor the global treaty has stopped poachers from > selling gorillas as bushmeat or for other purposes on the black market. > Activists and primate experts think the gorillas, which arrived at the > Taiping Zoo in January, were captured in a Cameroon rain forest. Their > mothers probably were killed, said Gadsby, of the Limbe Wildlife Centre. > Like humans, gorilla mothers and their youngsters bond deeply, she said. > " It's likely that the babies were pulled screaming off their mother's dead > body. " > The Taiping Zoo official said his zoo thought the animals were born in the > Ibadan Zoo in Nigeria and were part of a legitimate animal exchange between > two zoos. Further investigation by activists found that the documents > accompanying the gorillas had been falsified. > " The (Ibadan) Zoo has only one old female gorilla and a male who died years > ago and is exhibited stuffed, " said Shirley McGreal, chairwoman of the > International Primate Protection League, based in Summerville, S.C. > The World Association of Zoos and Aquariums has identified the National Zoo > of South Africa as the most suitable new location for the four young > gorillas, said Peter Dollinger, the association's executive director. > But animal welfare advocates, including well-known primate expert Jane > Goodall and the International Primate Protection League, are pressing for > the gorillas to go to the Limbe Wildlife Centre. > " Limbe already has eight gorillas in its care, all rescued from local or > commercial trade, " Goodall wrote in a letter last week to the senior > enforcement officer for the Convention on Trade of Endangered Species. > " Although most of those gorillas arrived in desperate condition, sick and > traumatized, the excellent care provided by Limbe's local and international > staff restored their health. " > The decision will be left to the Malaysian government. > Whether the gorillas go to another zoo or to a wildlife sanctuary, they will > live in an enclosed area. If they go to Limbe, Jenkins said, there's a > chance they could be reintroduced to the wild after they've grown and > learned to fend for themselves. > Even then, he said, rescuers would have to search for a place where the > gorillas would not once again be vulnerable to hunters. Michelle Cole: > 503-294-5143; michellecole > > © 2002 OregonLive.com. . > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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