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FLORA AND FAUNA
Baby gorilla death prompts bi-national poaching patrols
by Staff Writers
Kigali (AFP) March 21, 2012


The death of a baby mountain gorilla has prompted Rwanda and Democratic Republic of Congo to launch joint anti-poaching patrols to protect the endangered species, an official said Wednesday.

Prosper Uwingeli, a conservationist in Rwanda's Volcanoes National Park, which abuts the Virunga National Park in DR Congo, said the patrols were launched March 12 and had already destroyed several poaching traps.

Baby gorillas frequently fall victim to traps, even if they are not the species being hunted.

"These joint patrols were agreed upon following the death in a trap of a baby gorilla in February," Uwingeli said.

Mountain gorilla populations have been decimated by conflict and poaching. The creatures were famously brought to the world's attention by the late Dian Fossey, and are one of the region's main tourist attractions and foreign currency earners.

Rwanda charges $750 to foreign tourists for a permit to visit the primates.

Only about 700 mountain gorillas survive in the wild, with half of them concentrated in the Virunga massif that straddles the border between Rwanda, DR Congo and Uganda.

The critically endangered species is also found at a second location in Uganda, in the Bwindi Impenetrable Forest.

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CITES seeks tougher limits on coral, shark, dolphin trade
Geneva (AFP) March 21, 2012 - UN wildlife trade regulator CITES said Wednesday that tougher limits should be imposed on trade of aquatic species such as corals, dolphins and sturgeons to protect them from extinction.

After a week-long meeting in Geneva, experts of the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora decided to recommend "cautious export quotas" for species including seahorses from Southeast Asia, sturgeons from the Caspian Sea and giant clams from the Pacific.

Exports of dolphins from the Solomon Islands should be limited to 10 animals a year, they added.

Signatory states to the convention would decide whether to pass the recommendations when they meet in Bangkok in 2013.



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How the Burgess Shale Was Preserved
Copenhagen, Denmark (SPX) Mar 21, 2012
The Burgess Shale of British Columbia is arguably the most important fossil deposit in the world, providing an astounding record of the Cambrian "Explosion," the rapid flowering of complex life from single-celled ancestors. While most of the fossil record is comprised of shells, teeth and bones, the Burgess Shale preserves the softer bits-the eyes, guts, gills and other delicate structures ... read more


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