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FLORA AND FAUNA
Kenya's jumbo 'ele-fence' to stop human-wildlife conflict
By Romain GRAS
Laikipia, Kenya (AFP) June 24, 2016


New orchid species found in Philippine forest guerrilla zone
Manila (AFP) June 24, 2016 - Five new orchid species have been discovered in remote Philippine mountains, protected from poaching because of an insurgency in the region, conservationists said Friday.

The species are found only in a mountain range on the rebellion-torn Mindanao area in the southern Philippines and have eluded those cataloguing plant life for 200 years, expert Miguel David de Leon told AFP.

Poaching of wild orchids mostly by locals is rampant in the Philippines, with some communities illegally harvesting them without permits for export or to sell them along roads.

But Mindanao region is among the country's areas wracked by one of Asia's longest-running insurgencies, whereby Maoist guerrillas retain support among the poor in the farming and mountainous communities.

"The insurgency problem helps prevent poachers or would-be orchid-hunters from entering the forests," said De Leon, a plant and wildlife conservationist who found the species while trekking the mountains of Bukidnon province in Mindanao.

"These areas are very isolated. The terrain is treacherous, accessible only by foot and occasionally, a motorcycle or horse," he added.

The finds, first published in the German OrchideenJournal this year, include a dazzling yellow bloom flecked with brown spots.

"It is one of the most attractive among members of the genus," said De Leon.

"(The) other species are red or purple but this really stands out because it's the brightest shade of yellow."

De Leon, Australian taxonomist Jim Cootes and Filipino research associate Mark Arcebal Naive named their most vivid find Epicrianthes aquinoi, to honour outgoing Philippine President Benigno Aquino whose family uses the colour yellow in political rallies.

Other species they discovered include a pure white and a red-lipped white Dendrobium, a dark red Epicrianthes, and a green slipper orchid with red stripes.

Cootes, who has written three books on Philippine orchids, told AFP the discoveries showed the rich biodiversity of the Southeast Asian nation, with more species awaiting discovery.

"We need to preserve what is left because the variation within the different species is so high that it is almost priceless," he said.

"The mountains throughout the archipelago need to be preserved," he added.

US-based Conservation International lists the Philippines as among 35 biodiversity hotspots -- areas with the world's richest but most threatened plant and animal life.

Deforestation that plagues mountains across the Philippines also destroys orchid habitats as well as shrubs, fungi and algae that keep the forests alive.

Machete in hand, Kenyan farmer Paul Njoroge points at the broken branches and giant footprints where elephants trampled his bananas, maize, potatoes and sugar cane.

"We don't hate the elephants, but their activities are making us poor," said the 53-year old farmer, surveying his lush green fields, a five-hectare (12-acre) plot on the slopes of the Laikipia highlands in central Kenya.

"I have this big farm but yet sometimes I have to go for food handouts from the government."

While poachers slaughter thousands of elephants across Africa each year, competition between elephants and people over land is a far bigger problem in the long run, conservationists say.

To help combat that, a 163-kilometre (100-mile) electric fence is being erected to provide a separation zone between farmland and elephant migration routes.

Max Graham, from the Space for Giants conservation group leading the fence construction, believes it will improve safety for people and crops, protect the endangered animals from poachers, and ease pressure on grassland from farmers who sneak in livestock illegally to graze in areas reserved for wildlife.

- Man versus elephant 'frontline' -

"This is the frontline separating smallholder agriculture from elephant conservation," Graham said.

"While the elephant poaching crisis is a massive emergency problem, human-elephant conflict over the long term is going to be the single biggest issue for elephant conservation in Africa."

Laikipia, a 10,000 square kilometre (3,800 square mile) rangeland at the base of snowcapped Mount Kenya, some 200 kilometres (110 miles) north of the capital Nairobi, has the second-largest density of wildlife in Kenya after the world-famous Maasai Mara reserve.

The vast plateau is home to some 6,300 elephants -- as well as farmers trying to earn a living from the same lands. Conservationists record as many as 10 incidents of human-elephant conflict a day.

Conservationists argue that protecting the elephants will also help boost the tourist industry, which in this area employs thousands of Kenyans and brings in some $20 million (18 million euros) in revenue a year.

The $870,000 (775,000 euro) fence, funded by cash raised during a recent summit meeting in April to stem ivory poaching, is not cheap.

But it is hoped it will help end the more than $1 million (887,000 euros) worth of crops damaged by elephants every year.

Njoroge's losses alone totalled more than $4,000 (3,500 euros) over the past year.

- Compensation funds stretched -

Kenya's environment minister Judi Wakhungu says that compensation funds are overstretched, meaning rarer cases where people have been killed are given priority.

And without compensation from the government, the worst hit farmers can see poaching as an alternative to survive.

"Poaching is a problem, yes, but the biggest challenge we face in terms of wildlife conservation, is finding space for wildlife," said Wakhungu.

"As our human population grows, there's a lot of pressure to develop facilities and infrastructure."

In the past, rickety old fences were easily broken down by elephants hungry for the farmers' harvests.

When the elephants came, villagers would gather together, lighting fires and beating drums to scare them away, but to little effect.

Other methods have been tried: including smearing rope fences with chili paste, or burning chili mixed with elephant dung, methods that are not feasible over long distances.

The new fence carries a 7,000 volt pulsing electric shock, with dangling metre-long wire strips, to stop the elephants well before they can use their tusks to uproot posts as they did in the past.

"What it means is no more lost crops, a better income, and a better chance to pay for important things like school for my children," Njoroge said.

More than 20 people in the district have died in battles with elephants in the past two years, he said.

"We will continue to live here," he said. "We bury our neighbours and life is returning."

bur-pjm/tmc/ccr

GRAHAM PACKAGING


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