Kenya hosts slightly over 35,000.
• Lewa says there are approximately 352,271 elephants remaining in 18 African countries today
• The Red List is a critical indicator of the health of the world’s biodiversity, providing a powerful tool to inform and catalyze action for biodiversity conservation and policy change, critical to protecting the natural resources we need to survive.
African forest elephants have been listed as critically endangered under the International Union for Conservation's red list of threatened species.
African Savanna elephant has also been listed as endangered.
Established in 1964, the red list of threatened species has evolved to become the world’s most comprehensive information source on the global extinction risk status of animal, fungus, and plant species.
Lewa Wildlife Conservancy says from the 1970s to the 1980s, the ivory trade was rapidly expanding and wiped out about half of Africa’s 1.3 million elephants.
The conservancy says much more recently, between 2007 and 2014, the Great Elephant Census reported a 30 per cent decline in elephant population—equivalent to a loss of 144,000 elephants from a population of 480,000.
Lewa says there are about 352,271 elephants remaining in 18 African countries today. Kenya hosts slightly over 35,000.
The listing gives the two species more protection following a population decline over several decades due to poaching for ivory and loss of habitat.
Initially, African elephants were treated as single species, listed as vulnerable; this is the first time the two species have been assessed separately for the IUCN red list, following the emergence of new genetic evidence.
The IUCN Red List now includes 134,425 species, of which 37,480 are threatened with extinction.
The Red List is a critical indicator of the health of the world’s biodiversity.
Far more than a list of species and their status, it is a powerful tool to inform and catalyse action for biodiversity conservation and policy change, critical to protecting the natural resources we need to survive.
It provides information about the range, population size, habitat and ecology, use and/or trade, threats, and conservation actions that will help inform necessary conservation decisions.
“Africa’s elephants play key roles in ecosystems, economies, and in our collective imagination all over the world. Today’s new IUCN Red List assessments of both African elephant species underline the persistent pressures faced by these iconic animals,” said Dr Bruno Oberle, IUCN director general.
“We must urgently put an end to poaching and ensure that sufficient suitable habitat for both forest and savanna elephants is conserved. Several African countries have led the way in recent years, proving that we can reverse elephant declines, and we must work together to ensure their example can be followed.”
The latest assessments highlight a broadscale decline in African elephant numbers across the continent.
The number of African forest elephants fell by more than 86 per cent over 31 years, while the population of African savanna elephants decreased by at least 60 per cent over the last 50 years, according to the assessments.
Both species suffered sharp declines since 2008 due to a significant increase in poaching, which peaked in 2011 but continues to threaten populations.
The ongoing conversion of their habitats, primarily to agricultural and other land uses, is another significant threat.
The 2016 IUCN AfricanElephant Status Report provides the most recent reliable estimate of the continental population of the two species combined, at around 415,000 elephants.
Despite the overall declining trend of both African elephant species, the assessments also highlight the impact of successful conservation efforts.
Anti-poaching measures on the ground, together with more supportive legislation and land use planning that seeks to foster human-wildlife coexistence, have been key to successful conservation.
As a result, some forest elephants have stabilised in well-managed conservation areas in Gabon and the Republic of the Congo.
Savanna elephant numbers have also been stable or growing for decades especially in the Kavango-Zambezi Transfrontier Conservation Area, which harbours the largest subpopulation of this species on the continent.
“While the results of the assessment place the continental population of savanna elephants in the endangered category, it is important to keep in mind that at a site level, some subpopulations are thriving. For this reason, considerable caution and local knowledge are required when translating these results into policy,” said Dr Dave Balfour, assessor of the African elephants and member of the IUCN Species Survival Commission African Elephant Specialist Group.
The decision to treat African forest and savanna elephants as separate species is the result of the consensus that has emerged among experts following new research into the genetics of elephant populations.
Forest elephants occur in the tropical forests of Central Africa and in a range of habitats in West Africa.
They rarely overlap with the range of the savanna elephant, which prefers open country and is found in a variety of habitats in Sub-Saharan Africa including grasslands and deserts.
The forest elephant, which has a more restricted natural distribution, is thought to occupy only a quarter of its historic range today, with the largest remaining populations found in Gabon and theRepublic of the Congo.
“For these assessments, a team of six assessors used data from as far back as the 1960s and a fully data-driven modelling approach to consolidate the decades-long efforts of many survey teams for the first time," said Dr Kathleen Gobush, lead assessor of the African elephants and Member of the IUCN SSC African Elephant Specialist Group.
"The results quantify the dramatic extent of the decline of these ecologically important animals. With persistent demand for ivory and escalating human pressures on Africa’s wildlands, concern for Africa’s elephants is high, and the need to creatively conserve and wisely manage these animals and their habitats are more acute than ever.” By Gilbert Koech, The Star