Forum Karczmy Bezdennego Kufla
Forum świata wyobraźni...
FAQ
Szukaj
Użytkownicy
Grupy
Galerie
Rejestracja
Profil
Zaloguj się, by sprawdzić wiadomości
Zaloguj
Forum Forum Karczmy Bezdennego Kufla Strona Główna
->
Off Topic
Napisz odpowiedź
Użytkownik
Temat
Treść wiadomości
Emotikony
Więcej Ikon
Kolor:
Domyślny
Ciemnoczerwony
Czerwony
Pomarańćzowy
Brązowy
Żółty
Zielony
Oliwkowy
Błękitny
Niebieski
Ciemnoniebieski
Purpurowy
Fioletowy
Biały
Czarny
Rozmiar:
Minimalny
Mały
Normalny
Duży
Ogromny
Zamknij Tagi
Opcje
HTML:
TAK
BBCode
:
TAK
Uśmieszki:
TAK
Wyłącz HTML w tym poście
Wyłącz BBCode w tym poście
Wyłącz Uśmieszki w tym poście
Kod potwierdzający: *
Wszystkie czasy w strefie EET (Europa)
Skocz do:
Wybierz forum
Ogólne
----------------
Forum Ogólne
Karczma
----------------
Informacje
Wolna Twórczość
RPG
----------------
Sesje RPG
Gildie
Dla PCtowców
----------------
MMORPG
cRPG
Inne
Off Topic
----------------
Off Topic
Kosz
----------------
Kosz
Przegląd tematu
Autor
Wiadomość
cheapbag214s
Wysłany: Czw 7:42, 07 Lis 2013
Temat postu: a WCS conservationist
Hunting of African species said risking environmental catastrophe
STIRLING, Scotland, July 23 () -- Hunting of important animal species in central Africa could be pushing forests to the point of ecological collapse, an international research team says.Scientists from British and Australian universities and the Wildlife Conservation Society warn the current rate of unsustainable hunting of forest elephants, gorillas and other seed-dispersing species threatens the ability of forest ecosystems to regenerate.The researchers say unless landscape-wide hunting management plans are put in place there is a risk of environmental catastrophe, a WCS release said Tuesday."Humans have lived in the forests of Central Africa for thousands of years, until recently practicing subsistence hunting for the needs of their communities," lead study author Kate Abernethy of Scotland's Stirling University said. "Over the past few decades, this dynamic has drastically changed."Much of the hunting is now commercially driven, and species that play important ecological functions are being driven to local extinction." Mammals such as forest elephants, gorillas, forest antelopes and others play a major role in seed dispersal for most tree species, the researchers said, and the removal of these mammals by bushmeat hunters disrupts forest regeneration."Another emerging problem for Central Africa's forests is the migration of large numbers of people into remote forests, around the new plantations and the mining and logging camps," co-author Fiona Maisels, a WCS conservationist, said. "This population growth creates additional hunting pressures on previously lightly populated areas."The researchers said a top priority should be the protection of megafauna such as forest elephants and apex predators such as leopards in order to maintain intact ecosystems in Central Africa."The clock is ticking on the future of large mammals in Central Africa's Congo Basin Rainforest, and with them on the future of the forests themselves and all the people who depend on them," James Deutsch, executive director of WCS's Africa Program,[url=http://www.pradaoutletuks.co.uk]prada shoes men[/url], said. "The people, the forests, and the wildlife need an emergency effort to bring illegal and unsustainable hunting under control."
fora.pl
- załóż własne forum dyskusyjne za darmo
Powered by
phpBB
© 2001 phpBB Group
Chronicles phpBB2 theme by
Jakob Persson
(
http://www.eddingschronicles.com
). Stone textures by
Patty Herford
.
Regulamin