mardi 21 mai 2013

TRAFIC D'ELEPHANTS..

family-indian-elephant




LES CRIMES  CONTRE LES ÉLÉPHANTS ET LES RHINOCÉROS  MASSACRENT DES MILLIERS D' ANIMAUX CHAQUE ANNÉE, ET 2013 A TRÈS MAL COMMENCE. MAIS IL POURRAIT Y AVOIR UN MOYEN DE  LES PROTÉGER....
POUR COMMENCER ...MIEUX REPÉRER LES LIEUX DE RASSEMBLEMENT, POINTS D' EAU EN GÉNÉRAL  PARTAGER CES INFOS SUR GPS, CONSTRUIRE DE MEILLEURES CLÔTURES AUX RÉSERVES....
EN TOUS CAS LE PROBLÈME EST SOULEVÉ, C' EST DÉJÀ UN GRAND PAS..

 
SOURCE ET TOUT L' ARTICLE...



MNATSNewark, N.J. — With no shortage of human-on-human misdeeds, criminologists haven’t typically concerned themselves with crimes against wildlife and the environment. But with poaching raging out of control in several areas of the world, that may be changing.
“There is a growing sense of urgency about what’s going on in the environment,” Todd Clear, dean of Rutgers University’s School of Criminal Justice, said here at a symposium Tuesday (May 14) on wildlife crime.
A variety of new research projects highlighted during the conference show that poaching and crimes against wildlife do follow patterns seen in other areas of criminology, knowledge that could be used to prevent these misdeeds. Famed Rutgers criminologist Ronald Clarke called on biologists and criminologists to work together to fight poaching and other issues where illegal acts are committed against nature.
As with other crimes, poaching often takes place in certain hotspots where conditions are optimal. Rhinos and elephants, for example, are often shot near watering holes where they predictably return to drink — and the poaching of elephants and rhinos is at an all-time high in many areas. Poaching has already pushed rhinos to extinction in Vietnam, for example. [Black Market Horns: Images from a Rhino Bust]

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