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63

SCENARIOS OF GORILLAS –

THE LAST STAND

Partial gorilla, and full chimpanzee carcasses are sold for 20–30

USD on the markets. In some areas smoked gorilla meat has

been sold for as little as 25 cents per pound (Raffaele, 1005; Ape

Alliance, 2006). Estimates in the late 1990s were that around

4,5000 gorillas were killed annually (Marshall

et al.

, 2000).

The estimates presented earlier around the town of Kindu sug-

gested around 76,000 animals per year extracted from about

6000 km

2

of forest, of which 225 were bonobo carcasses. A

recent investigation by the Ape Alliance suggested that apes

were now present at around 0.5–2% of all the bushmeat (Ape

Alliance, 2006) – which would be equivalent to tens of thou-

sands of chimpanzees, gorillas and bonobos ever year. Great

uncertainty exists around these estimates, but it is clear that

bushmeat is rising across large parts of the ten gorilla range

states, even though great ape meat is still taboo in some areas.

Estimates based on modeling of habitat loss caused by agricul-

tural expansion and logging around the growing road network

in 2002, and projections onwards to 2050, suggested that less

than 10% of the gorilla habitat would be left by 2032 (UNEP,

Scenarios developed in 2002 on the role of infrastructure development on resource ex-

traction and poaching suggested that great ape habitat and subsequently populations

in the greater Congo Basin could decline by to as little as 10% of their original range by

2032. Since then, however, reports and interviews conducted in the region, though dif-

ficult to quantify, suggest that poaching for bushmeat is substantially on the rise, so is

the extent of logging and cutting for charcoal. Several areas are reporting lowered wildlife

abundance, and poachers are even using bicycles to transport meat on trails and poor

roads far beyond the main road system.

2002). However, these estimates did not take into account the

rise in logging and widespread burning of charcoal initiated

by militias in the national parks, the outbreaks of Ebola and

the most likely rising bushmeat trade including significant

great ape proportions as reported to feed a now much more

rapidly rising population in the Congo Basin (Wilkie and Car-

penter, 1999; Fa

et al.

, 2000; Brashares

et al.

, 2004; Ryan and

Bell, 2005; Poulsen

et al.

, 2009). Neither did these former es-

timates take into account the extensive mining and logging,

with a subsequent large labor force in need of bushmeat, es-

pecially in the logging camps (Brashares

et al.

, 2004; Poulsen

et al.

, 2009). Many of the professional bush meat hunters also

benefit heavily from the logging “road” systems established by

the loggers, to more easily penetrate and kill great apes, that

become easy prey.

It is therefore highly likely, even with the uncertainty in abso-

lute numbers, that the previous estimate given in 2002 sug-

gesting a reduction by 2032 to only 10% of the original range,

was far too optimistic. This low may already be reached in a

little more than a decade from now.