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Peter Knights & WildAid
By Ed "Redwood" Ring |
| Peter Knights co-directs WildAid, which is probably the most under-recognized heroic environmental organization on earth. Somehow Peter Knights went from being a graduate of the London School of Economics to a leader on the front lines of the fight to save endangered species. I don't know how this young man in his mid-thirties got from there to here, and I didn't ask. But talking with him last week at their offices in San Francisco, it was clear there was not only uncommon courage but great intellectual substance to this warrior for the environment. |
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Knights and his colleagues travel the world identifying local police and rangers who are attempting to stop the poachers. He then uses WildAid funds to equip and train the rangers. The work doesn't stop once a check is written, WildAid also places experts in wildlife security with these anti-poaching groups, who then train them in effective tactics, including non-lethal forms of apprehension. Recently, for example, WildAid co-director Suwanna Gauntlett sent John Gavitt, who had been the Chief Ranger for the Fish and Wildlife Service in Alaska, to Cambodia on an assignment to train anti-poaching rangers in that country.
Poaching can reduce a species to extinction within a few short years, if demand suddenly rises and local police power diminishes. That is exactly what happened in the Russian Far East in the '90s, when Soviet authority waned and lawless elements began to exercise more dominance. At the same time global prosperity, particularly in Asia, caused sharply higher demand for the body parts of tigers. WildAid's program to equip and train the Rangers in the Russian Far East is largely responsible for pulling that creature back, barely, from total extinction. The Siberian tiger is now thought to be stable and increasing in population. The program is generally recognized as the most effective anti-poaching for tigers in the world. |
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Endangered species are countless, but WildAid has identified a select few "indicator" species, many of which are apex predators, that if saved can have a cascading positive effect through huge planetary ecoregions. This strategy is especially important when one considers that the extinction of these indicator species will cause a converse reaction, a huge and possibly fatal disruption to the balanced functioning of an entire ecoregion. With that in mind, WildAid has pared their salvation efforts to the following list of animals: Big Cats, Elephants, Rhinos, Apes, Bears, Birds, Marine Mammals, Sea Turtles, and Sharks.
Eating shark fin soup, which can cost $100 per bowl in Hong Kong, is considered a mark of prestige. Even more than the reputed healthful effects, is the gesture that eating this expensive delicacy represents. The fin, in fact, has no flavor, and only yields a noodle-like texture.
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WildAid is campaigning for a global ban on shark finning rather than a ban on all fishing of sharks. They hope to bring global attention to this issue. They are working with the government and the fishing industries to reduce shark fishing to sustainable levels. At the same time, they will work on reducing the demand for shark fin soup in Asia. Knights mentioned this effort as a choice of pragmatism over dogmatism. Knights noted that preventing all exploitation of a species was often not a viable option. While he may have ethical concerns about big game hunting, for example, he would not oppose it in conservation terms if it didn't impact the species and generated funds benefiting conservation.
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