The world’s rarest gorilla, which is believed to be down to less than
300 remaining individuals, can be saved with a $10.5m action plan,
conservationists say.
The Cross River gorilla (Gorilla gorilla
diehli) lives in a hilly rainforest area around 12,000 sq km in size
along the Nigeria-Cameroon border, regarded as a globally significant
“biodiversity hotspot.” It is the rarest of four gorilla sub-species and
is listed as critically endangered.
But experts at the Wildlife
Conservation Society believe its population could remain stable and even
increase if a new five-year plan is put into place to protect it from
poachers who hunt it for bushmeat, and habitat loss as land is turned
over to farming.
The plan says that levels of poaching in the
past may have been underestimated, and that the forest it lives in is
becoming increasingly fragmented, as trees are cleared for farming,
particularly in Nigeria.
“With such a small population, the loss
of even a few individuals each year represents a very serious threat to
their long-term survival,” the report says.
The plan for
2014-2019 calls for more research into the gorillas’ distribution, more
local-led conservation efforts, monitoring of disease, ecotourism
developments, and safeguarding of ‘corridors’ between the species’ main
sites.
The species has shorter palates than other gorillas, and
short, strong jaws, which ecologists believe may be because they feed on
tough tree bark during dry seasons.
“The outlook for the Cross
River gorilla is encouraging, provided we build on past successes and
continue with key partnerships to protect this great ape and its
remaining habitat,” said Andrew Dunn, lead author of the report.

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