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FLORA AND FAUNA
Swazis question rangers' special powers in poaching battle
by Staff Writers
Mbabane (AFP) July 6, 2011

A teenage rhino calf died of stress and hunger last week in Swaziland after poachers slaughtered its mother, the first rhino killed in the tiny kingdom in two decades.

At the same time, a 16-year-old boy lay in hospital, a tube draining the fluid from his lung, lacerated by a bullet from a ranger's gun.

An elite team of rangers have protected Swaziland's game for decades, under a law that allows them to shoot poachers in life-threatening situations and grants immunity from prosecution if acting in the line of duty.

The tough measures have saved Swaziland's rhinos from the brink of extinction and largely kept at bay the surge in poaching that has sit neighbouring South Africa.

But the shooting of the teenager and an elderly man who allegedly bled to death near a game park has raised fresh concerns.

The teenager, who as a minor cannot be named, said he and two friends were walking outside the perimeter of the southern Mkhaya Reserve when rangers gave chase.

He said they shot him in the back.

"I am angry. If only they could have warned us first maybe I would have understood," he told AFP.

Big Game Parks, which either owns or operates Swaziland's major reserves, said the shooting occurred after dark inside the park. Rangers couldn't be certain if the boys were armed, spokesman Mike Richardson told AFP.

"The game rangers were obviously on high alert assuming everybody is there to poach rhino," he said.

Environmental lawyer Thuli Makama said both the boys suspected of poaching as well as the shooter should have been arrested.

"This shooting happened too close to the rhino story. The rangers could be on a rampage out of rage and despair," she said.

However, in the five years that she has followed cases like this one, no game ranger has ever been prosecuted.

"They have their own law," she said.

Big Game Parks says that despite their rangers' special legal status, they are not above the law.

"No ranger who abuses his powers is above the law and it does not require the police to arrest him, because the rangers of Big Game Parks do so themselves and hand the wrong-doer to the police," declares the company website.

Richardson said the company applied a "strict code of conduct" and had dealt with heavy-handed behaviour severely in the past.

The power to use deadly force against poachers rests with one family in Swaziland: the O'Reillys.

They own Big Game Parks, and have close a relationship to royalty that goes back to the 1960s. The parks provide the royal clan with a steady supply of animal pelts for the many traditional ceremonies that mark the Swazi calendar.

King Mswati III has entrusted the company to enforce Swaziland's anti-poaching law to protect "royal game".

An amended Game Act came into force in 1991 following a long and bloody war against rhino poachers in the 1980s, and is one of the "strictest anti-poaching laws in the world", according to Richardson.

The law frequently leads to conflict with local communities.

Only eight people, the O'Reilly family and five employees, have the legal right to use deadly force.

But Makama said "Big Game Parks also delegates these special enforcement powers to their friends -- farmers in the Lowveld."

A day before the teenager was shot, an elderly man allegedly bled to death after being shot by employees of a private game farm near the Mkhaya reserve.

The man's family told the Swazi Observer newspaper he left home to fetch some stray cattle and never returned.

"The whole community is being held to ransom and they are living in fear," said Makama.

Richardson said Big Game Parks is in no way linked to the incident which he said was more likely to have been a trespassing issue.

Last year Swaziland's parliament set up a committee to hold hearings into alleged human rights abuses resulting from the Game Act.

The committee has yet to release its findings.




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Study predicts areas of 'missing' species
Durham, N.C. (UPI) Jul 5, 2011 - Most of the world's "missing" or undiscovered species live in regions already identified by scientists as biodiversity hotpots, a U.S. study says.

The study, published in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, suggests recent conservation efforts have been on target and should reduce uncertainty over global conservation priorities, it authors said.

However, the extinction threat for many of the as-yet undiscovered species is worse than previously feared, they said.

"We show that the majority of the world's 'missing species' are hiding away on some of the most threatened landscapes in the world," said Stuart Pimm, a professor of conservation at Duke University. "This considerably increases the number of threatened and endangered species around the world."

And the world's knowledge of species is seriously incomplete, with many as-yet undiscovered, a Duke release said Tuesday.

"We know we have an incomplete catalogue of life," said lead author Lucas Joppa of Microsoft Research in Cambridge, England, who received his doctorate in ecology from Duke in 2009.

"If we don't know how many species there are, or where they live, then how can we prioritize places for conservation? What if the places we ignore now turn out to be those with the most unknown species?"

The researchers said six regions already identified by conservation scientists as hotspots -- Mexico to Panama; Colombia; Ecuador to Peru; Paraguay and Chile southward; southern Africa; and Australia -- were estimated to contain 70 percent of all predicted missing species.

"How can you save a species you don't even know exists?" Joppa asked. "You can't. But you can protect places where you predict they occur."





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East Lansing MI (SPX) Jul 05, 2011
Evolutionary adaptation is often compared to climbing a hill, and organisms making the right combination of multiple mutations - both good and bad - can become the king of the mountain. A new study published in the Proceedings of the Royal Society of London by BEACON researchers at Michigan State University suggests that the combined effect of multiple mutations working together can speed ... read more


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