Scientist say animals still need protecting and also connecting to restore habitats fragmented by human activities

African elephant populations have stabilised in their southern heartlands after huge losses over the last century, according to the most comprehensive analysis of growth rates to date.

The latest analysis also provides the strongest data so far showing that protected areas that are connected to other places are far better than isolated “fortress” parks at maintaining stable populations, by allowing the elephants to migrate back and forth between areas as they did naturally in the past.

Continue reading…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like

Experience: we adopted the loneliest dog in Britain

He’d been in the rescue centre for 500 days. No one wanted…

The search for life – from Venus to the outer solar system

While the discovery of the normally microbe-produced phosphine on our toxic neighbour…

P&O Cruises and Cunard prepare to fire and rehire more than 900 UK staff

Cruise firms prepare to dismiss crew unless they accept salary cuts and…