Saturday, 17 December 2016

Permaculture Can SAVE millions Elephants and other Habtants.

ELEPHANTS IN DANGER, YOUR CHOICES MAKE A DIFFERENCE.

In every part of history, elephants have been a vital key in human culture, religion and economies. The colossal size, structure, and strength of the largest living land mammal has fascinated people of different cultures and norms for hundreds of years. Elephants are a great symbol and sign of many tribes in the world and very special and rare animals. Uganda is not only home to the Elephants but to its smaller brother – the Forest Elephants. Most likely you will not see the differences unless you pay close attention – they have 5 toes on their front feet and four the back ones.  They have a covering of hair and are grey in color. They have smaller tusks and they are straighter and point downwards so that they can navigate around the tropical rainforest jungles of West, Central Africa and in Uganda – They enter through a wildlife corridor from the Democratic Republic into Ishasha – this corridor leads them as far as Kabale Forest and in Asia, in countries Like Thailand, China and in other regions on the continent
Forest Elephant Tusks are of the highest quality and they favored by Ivory Poachers because the ivory is harder and yet retains its elastic qualities – unfortunately poaching is rampant in the Democratic Republic of Congo and on the increase in Uganda and Elephants are killed for their ivory and that includes Forest Elephants.
These kind of Elephants communicate with one another over long distances through calls that most often are too low to be heard by humans.  As far as living in harmony with the forest – these elusive animals of the forest can cause much more destructive manage than their Savannah cousins – taking down trees, digging up the ground, destroying the underbrush for their trails.
Forest Elephants can breed any time of the year – the gestation period is 22 months in length and normally give birth to a single Forest Elephant calf. As far as predators are concerned – the main ones are humans, both poachers and those who encroach into the parks destroying the Forest Elephants habitat.
Forest Elephants –in Uganda can be found Kabale Forest, Rwenzori Mountain Foothills, Mgahinga Gorilla Park, Semliki Park, Mount Elgon, Bwindi Impenetrable Forest, and Ishasha Sector of Queen Elizabeth Park.  The Forest Elephants of Uganda – another reason to visit the Pearl of Africa and other tropical regions of Africa
Diet, Staples: Grasses, leaves, bamboo, bark, roots. Elephants are also known to eat crops like banana and sugarcane which are grown by farmers. Adult elephants eat 300-400 lbs of food per day.
Population, at the turn of the 20th century, there were a few million African elephants and about 100,000 Asian elephants. Today, there are an estimated 450,000 - 700,000 African elephants and between 35,000 - 40,000 wild Asian elephants.
Range, elephants are found in savannah zones in 37 countries south of the Sahara Desert. Forest elephants inhabit the dense rainforests of west and central Africa – Uganda. The Asian elephant is found in India, Sri Lanka, China and much of Southeast Asia.
Behavior, Elephants form deep family bonds and live in tight matriarchal family groups of related females called a herd. The herd is led by the oldest and often largest female in the herd, called a matriarch. Herds consist of 8-100 individuals depending on terrain and family size. When a calf is born, it is raised and protected by the whole matriarchal herd. Males leave the family unit between the ages of 12-15 and may lead solitary lives or live temporarily with other males.
Elephants are extremely intelligent animals and have memories that span many years. It is this memory that serves matriarchs well during dry seasons when they need to guide their herds, sometimes for tens of miles, to watering holes that they remember from the past. They also display signs of grief, joy, anger and play.
Challenges
Illegal wildlife Trade, many elephants are being killed for Ivory. The reckless trophy hunting of imperiled wildlife in Africa has to stop. Demand that all international air carriers refuse to ship imperiled big game trophies.
Habitat loss is one of the key threats facing elephants. climate change projections indicate that key portions of elephants’ habitat will become significantly hotter and drier, resulting in poorer foraging conditions and threatening calf survival. Increasing conflict with human populations taking over more and more elephant habitat and poaching for ivory are additional threats that are placing the elephant’s future at risk.
Poaching, African elephant lies dying – yet another victim of a poacher's rifle. Her ivory tusks will be hacked off her still-warm body to fuel an illegal international ivory trade worth millions of dollars. Between 2010 and 2012, poachers slaughtered an estimated 100,000 elephants for their ivory. That's roughly one elephant butchered every 15 minutes.
 SOLUTIONS
The reckless trophy hunting of imperiled wildlife in Africa has to stop. Demand that all international air carriers refuse to ship imperiled big game trophies, effective immediately!
ESTABLISH private permaculture elephant food forest double standard Eco systems, Elephant friendly Jungles for food, breeding and safety in all regions, through planting a million of trees, conservation of biodiversity, preserve water bodies, in addition innovating ivory substitutes.
Fight and report to protect elephants and other threatened and endangered wildlife, Adopt an Elephant, A symbolic adoption helps save real animals in the wild, Take Action on law and elephant protection policy, Visit our Wildlife Action Center to send a message to government leaders, Speak Up for Wildlife, Learn how you can be a powerful advocate for wildlife.
Keep the pressure on the Government to follow through on plans to end the domestic trade in ivory;
Mobilize against “Save Elephants Campaigns” efforts to weaken ivory import, export and sale restrictions in Uganda and in other regions, Conservation leadership at international wildlife fora such as the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species.
 “There’s no time to lose. let us Stand today so that our children can experience the wonder of elephants in their world.” – Mugarura Charles -


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