In this Sept. 15 photo released by Virunga National Park, a baby Grauer's gorilla that had been poached from Kahuzi-Biega National Park is seen at the Senkwekwe Orphan Gorilla Center in Congo.(Photo: Handout via AP)
NEW DELHI -- Twenty-five species of monkeys, langurs, lemurs and
gorillas are on the brink of extinction and need global action to
protect them from increasing deforestation and illegal trafficking,
researchers said Monday.
Six of the severely threatened species
live in the island nation of Madagascar, off southeast Africa. Five more
from mainland Africa, five from South America and nine species in Asia
are among those listed as most threatened.
The report by the
International Union for Conservation of Nature was released at the
United Nations' Convention on Biological Diversity being held in the
southern Indian city of Hyderabad.
Primates, mankind's closest living relatives, contribute to the ecosystem by dispersing seeds and maintaining forest diversity.
Conservation efforts have helped several species of primates that are
no longer listed as endangered, said the report, prepared every two
years by some of the world's leading primate experts.
The report,
which counts species and subspecies of primates across the world, noted
that Madagascar's lemurs are severely threatened by habitat destruction
and illegal hunting, which has accelerated dramatically since the change
of power in the country in 2009.
Among the most severely hit was the northern sportive lemur, with only 19 known individuals left in the wild in Madagascar.
"Lemurs
are now one of the world's most endangered groups of mammals, after
more than three years of political crisis and a lack of effective
enforcement in their home country, Madagascar," said Christoph Schwitzer
of the Bristol Conservation and Science Foundation, one of the groups
involved in the study.
"A similar crisis is happening in Southeast
Asia, where trade in wildlife is bringing many primates very close to
extinction," Schwitzer said.
More than half of the world's 633
types of primates are in danger of becoming extinct because of human
activity such as the burning and clearing of tropical forests, the
hunting of primates for food and the illegal wildlife trade.
While
the situation appears dire for some species, wildlife researchers say
conservation efforts are beginning to pay off, with several primates
being removed from the list, now in its seventh edition.
India's
lion-tailed macaque and Madagascar's greater bamboo lemur have been
taken off the endangered inventory for 2012 after the targeted species
appeared to have recovered.
Also, conservation efforts have
ensured that the world did not lose a single primate species to
extinction in the 20th century, and no primate has been declared extinct
so far this century, said Russell A. Mittermeier, president of
Conservation International and the chairman of the IUCN Species Survival
Commission's primate specialist group.
"Amazingly, we continue to
discover new species every year since 2000," Mittermeier said. "What is
more, primates are increasingly becoming a major ecotourism attraction,
and primate-watching is growing in interest."
In a separate
report on global urbanization released Monday at the Hyderabad
conference, the United Nations urged urban planners to incorporate green
spaces in cities as more and more people move away from rural areas in
search of work.
Green areas in big cities perform important
ecological functions, such as "filtering dust, absorbing carbon dioxide
from the air and improving air quality," the Convention on Biological
Diversity said in its new assessment.
The "Cities and Biodiversity
Outlook" is the first global analysis of how urban land expansion will
impact biodiversity in the coming decades.
The world's total urban
area is expected to triple between 2000 and 2030, with urban
populations set to double to around 4.9 billion in the same period.
Data
from the United Kingdom show that a 10% increase in tree canopy cover
in cities may result in a 3-4 degree Celsius decrease in ambient
temperature, thus reducing energy used for air conditioning, the report
said.
Urban biodiversity also delivers important health benefits,
with studies showing that proximity to trees can reduce the prevalence
of childhood asthma and allergies.
Associated Press