Posts Past & Random
Taking Animals Seriously

Dr. Paul Kail

article thumbnailI recently came across an article on the CNN web-site. An animal welfare group had found that a certain size of joghurt pot is just the right size and shape for skunks to get their heads into. ...
+ Full Story

Desert recovery

Dale McCrea w/forward by Jeffree Benet

article thumbnail Did you know that in one day a full-grown oak tree expels 7 tons of water through its leaves?
+ Full Story

More Thinknovation
Home Back to Think Magazine

postheadericon Brothers and Sisters on the Dinner Plate

User Rating: / 1
PoorBest 

There are over 6,000,000,000 humans on this planet. By contrast, there are just 20,000 bonobos, 120,000 chimpanzees and 50,000 gorillas left outside captivity. They are our closest relatives. Incredibly, the few that are still alive are hunted and eaten as "bushmeat", by soldiers and workers of logging companies.

bush meat

A
nimals killed in the bush for food, or "bushmeat" could result in the virtual extinction of non-human apes within ten or twenty years. Chimpanzee researcher Jane Goodall believes that a crisis of such proportions should be high on the agenda of all governments.

"At the turn of the last century there were some 2 million wild chimpanzees in Africa. When I began my chimpanzee research in 1960, there must have been well over a million. Today... 150,000 chimpanzees remain."

There is nothing new about Africans eating animals killed in the rainforest. What is new is first, the scale of the killing, and second, the fact that it has become a commercial activity. Logging companies, often from Europe, are building new roads, which provide access into deeper areas of the forest. The companies also bring in workers, who often depend on bushmeat for survival. As well as this, the companies' vehicles are used to carry the bushmeat out of the rainforests to markets in the cities.

The bushmeat trade is widely accepted in the region: in Cameroon, everybody from pygmies to the President eats it, and most are unconcerned that the animals are protected and seriously endangered. Although bushmeat trading is illegal, local police are often unwilling to enforce wildlife laws. Forestry guards lack the money or equipment to do the job properly themselves.

A hunter can make as much as $1000 a year from commercial hunting, which is more than the average household income. Hunters typically reinvest their "earnings" in more sophisticated killing technology, which makes the process more profitable and even less sustainable. bush meat gorilla

The World Bank project to build an oil pipeline through Cameroon will aggravate the problem.?The Bank's Environmental Assessment has recommended that employees of the oil companies should not be allowed to hunt for bushmeat while they are staying in company housing, or working for the company. However, any opening up of the forests will inevitably increase pressure on the animals. Many species are involved, including elephants, forest antelopes, cane rats, pangolins and guinea fowl. However, perhaps the most disturbing is the trade in apes.

Bonobos, or pygmy apes, are our closest living relatives. Genetically, chimpanzees and bonobos are both about 1. 6% different from us; gorillas are about 2. 3% different from us. Gorillas are closer to us than they are to chimpanzees or bonobos. By comparison, the red-eye vireo and the white-eyed vireo, two closely related North American birds, are 2. 9% different genetically.

bush meat

The best-known bonobo is Kanzi. Kanzi has been on the cover of Time Magazine, and has been involved in language training since 1980. Brought up in a human environment, he is able to understand spoken English sentences at the level of a two year old human, and can communicate simpler sentences by using symbols on a special keyboard.

His utterances show the use of simple syntax, and thus seriously challenge the views of people such as Noam Chomsky, who believe that syntax is a uniquely human phenomenon. Perhaps for this reason, Chomsky refuses to talk to him.

Two of Kanzi's friends, Austin and Sherman, are common chimpanzees. They are able to communicate both with humans and with each other using symbol keyboards. They can recognize themselves on TV, and can easily distinguish between pictures that are recorded and those that are live.

Koko, a gorilla living in Hawaii, can use 500 sign-language words, but understands many times that amount. According to her human trainer, Francine Patterson: "She is learning the letters of the alphabet, and can read some printed words, including her own name. She has achieved scores of between 85 and 95 on the Stanford-Binet Intelligence Test."

koko and trainerHere is an example of a conversation with Koko:

(Koko is looking at a picture of a horse with a bit in his mouth). Koko: Horse sad. Trainer: Why?

Koko: Teeth.

"She demonstrates a clear self-awareness by engaging in self-directed behaviour in front of a mirror... and by her appropriate use of self-directed language... She has produced paintings and drawings which are representational. She remembers and can talk about past events in her life.

"She can talk about what happens when one dies, but she becomes uncomfortable when asked to discuss her own death or the death of her companions."


How would you feel if Koko ended up on somebody's dinner plate? www.Animals.org

blog comments powered by Disqus
 

Our valuable member Dr. Paul Kail has been with us since Friday, 28 November 2008.

Show Other Articles Of This Author

Coalition for a Chemical Free Lunch
Seeking to eliminate harmful chemical additives from our Children's Trays!
Humanifesto
Seeking alternatives for developing autonomous regeneration of the environment? Tired of pollution causing damaging weather changes because of the choices we citizens make? The climate is our commons; it is the root of the world's communities. Deep thinking will be needed, depending on the dilemma facing Earth. Ecological and economic matters will suffer equally from our emission-based energies. Energy has lasting environmental impacts, something environmentalist groups have warned about for years. Environmentalists are not just people passing moral judgment, they are just keenly aware that resources are finite. Food, fossil fuels and the markets, are global as is their impact. How great it would be if we could green the earth and grow the economy? A cleaner environment contributes to better health, helping us begins by learning how industrial activities can merge into the ecologically sound lifestyle. There is no limit on what we can do if we keep in mind local impact of our production with the moral clarity of our obligation to protect Mother Nature. A new organic Participatory ecology is forming; we can no longer turn blind eyes to the actions of those who pollute. We can preserve future growth by recognizing the problems, establishing protocols, and setting benchmarks for recognizing pollution reduction. Instead of exploiting the earth's natural resources, we will rely on renewable resources to save our legacy. If this makes sense to you, and you're serious about finding a solution for earth restoring technological advances, we'd love to hear your thoughts. Share with us ideas, problems, experiences with new technologies and environmental trends about restoring nature's right to clean water and abundant wildlife.
Think Books
Books
Global travel & listings site about music, art, fashion. Reviews on bars, events, clubs, discos, restaurants, music, movies, politics, humor, history.
Recommended:

Osocio.org - Social advertising and non-profit campaigns from around the globe

The Molecular Biology of Paradise

Green Design will Save the World

The Venus Project is dedicated to confronting all of these problems by actively engaging in the research, development, and application of workable solutions to today's problems