Rangers find 109,217 poaching snares in a single park in Cambodia.
Snares – either metal or rope – are indiscriminately killing wildlife
across Southeast Asia, from elephants to mouse deer. The problem has
become so bad that scientists are referring to protected areas in the
region as “empty forests.”
A simple break cable for motorbikes
can kill a tiger, a bear, even a young elephant in Southeast Asia. Local
hunters use these ubiquitous wires to create snares – indiscriminate
forest bombs – that are crippling and killing Southeast Asia’s most
charismatic species and many lesser-known animals as well.
A fact from a new paper in Biodiversity Conservation highlights the
scale of this epidemic: in Cambodia’s Southern Cardamom National Park
rangers with the Wildlife Alliance removed 109,217 snares over just six
years .
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