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Keeping Rhinos Alive by Watching What Antiques You Buy

Black rhinoRhinos have been decimated by poaching. Credit: USFWS

 People don’t often think about it, but even sales of antiques made from endangered plants or animals can hurt the survival of those species.  Antiques can raise demand for similar products, which really just feeds the destruction of those animals.

A global black market hungers for rhino horn – an NBC report last year estimated the value of rhino horns at $25,000 a pound. They are used in Asian medicines on the misguided notion that they cure diseases, even cancer … of course, no scientific evidence supports that they really do any of that. Rhino horns are made of keratin, the same stuff that makes up hair and fingernails. They are also a sought-after carving material for ceremonial dagger handles and libation cups.

Poaching numbers for rhino jump every day, it seems. Wildlife authorities reported a rhino “death toll” of 668 for South Africa alone in 2012, a level of illegal take that translates roughly into a rhino being killed every 12 or so hours. This year, it’s even worse. As of April 3, 203 rhinos have already been poached in South Africa in 2013.

That is why I taped a segment on Antiques Roadshow talking about the rhino crisis. You can watch it online. You can also see a bonus interview I did.

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To Sniff out Illegal Wildlife Trade: Follow their Noses

Detector dogWildlife Inspector Amir Lawal of the Service’s Miami Law Enforcement Office and his canine partner, Viper, check packages on a conveyor belt during training. Credit: Tom MacKenzie/USFWS

Ed Grace, Deputy Chief of our Law Enforcement Office, shares some exciting news:

Dogs never cease to amaze me – whether they are sniffing out bombs, providing eyes or extra hands for their partners, flushing out pheasant or retrieving waterfowl for hunters, or providing that 24-7 friendship only dogs can. I recently saw that our Southwest Region had used dogs trained to sniff out Jemez salamanders.

That’s why I am so excited to welcome the newest employees of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service: Wildlife Detector Dogs Viper, Butter, Lancer and Locket.

They are part of our latest effort to fight the rising international black market in endangered animal parts – a callous and brutal trade that drives its victims closer to extinction. Much of the illegal wildlife trade passes across U.S. borders and we do stop much of it.

In 2012 alone, we inspected more than 180,000 shipments of wildlife and wildlife products, and successfully executed one of the largest investigative operations ever mounted by the Service – Operation Crash – which broke a global rhino horn smuggling ring.

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Adapting to Climate Change, for the Good of Wild Things and the Nation

As I walk around my neighborhood near Washington, DC, I see daffodils brightening gardens and lawns, poking up through the snow.

Daffodils are just one of the flowers blooming earlier. Credit: Kevin Rutherford, Wikimedia Commons

No one really minds seeing flowers that remind us that spring is coming, but these early blooms are just one of the many impacts of a changing climate, and most aren’t as friendly as a spot of yellow in your yard.

With our newly released National Fish, Wildlife and Plants Climate Adaptation Strategy, developed with the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, state wildlife agencies and many others, the United States has a solid plan to meet the challenge of climate change. Climate change is not a myth. It is not something for future generations to deal with. It is happening now, and we must address it, not tomorrow or the next day or the day after that. But today!

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Last updated: August 31, 2011