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Rhino & Elephant Foundation 1992. Past estimates and present figures of black and white rhino populations in Africa. REF News no. 7: 3.

Past estimates and present figures of black and white rhino populations in Africa

Note
Location Africa Subject Distribution Species White Rhino (simum)

3841

Note
Location Africa Subject Distribution Species White Rhino (simum) Year 1991

4700

Note
Location Africa Subject Distribution Species White Rhino (simum) Year 1990

4225

Note
Location Africa Subject Distribution Species White Rhino (simum) Year 1984

3300

Note
Location Africa Subject Distribution Species White Rhino (simum) Year 1980

2500

Note
Location Africa Subject Distribution Species White Rhino (simum) Year 1991

5231

Note
Location Africa Subject Distribution Species White Rhino (simum) Year 1990

4745

Note
Location Africa Subject Distribution Species White Rhino (simum) Year 1984

3947

Note
Location Africa Subject Distribution Species White Rhino (simum) Year 1991

3481

Note
Location Africa Subject Distribution Species White Rhino (simum) Year 1991

798

Note
Location Africa Subject Distribution Species White Rhino (simum) Year 1990

626

Note
Location Africa Subject Distribution Species White Rhino (simum) Year 1987

580

Note
Location Africa Subject Distribution Species White Rhino (simum) Year 1984

640

Note
Location Africa Subject Distribution Species White Rhino (simum) Year 1980

630

Note
Location Africa Subject Distribution Species White Rhino (simum) Year 1990

3392

Note
Location Africa Subject Distribution Species White Rhino (simum) Year 1987

3805

Note
Location Africa Subject Distribution Species White Rhino (simum) Year 1984

8800

Note
Location Africa Subject Distribution Species White Rhino (simum) Year 1980

14785

Note
Location Africa Subject Distribution Species White Rhino (simum) Year 1970

65000

Note
Location Africa Subject Distribution Species White Rhino (simum) Year 1992

?People can just kiss the black rhino goodbye,' Mr Jorgen Thomsen, the director of WWF-affiliate Traffic International, which monitors the international trade in fauna and flora, told a meeting of the 112-member countries of CITES, The South African and Zimbabwean delegations to CITES had requested a limited, controlled trade in rhino horn to help fund conservation, without success. Zimbabwe claims it costs R56 million (US $20 million) to run antipoaching programmes to protect its black rhinos-Africa's largest remaining and most severely threatened population-but the allocated budget is only half that amount.

Note
Location Africa Subject Distribution Species White Rhino (simum) Year 1992

'People can just kiss the black rhino goodbye,' Mr Jorgen Thomsen, the director of WWF-affiliate Traffic International, which monitors the international trade in fauna and flora, told a meeting of the 112-member countries of CITES, The South African and Zimbabwean delegations to CITES had requested a limited, controlled trade in rhino horn to help fund conservation, without success. Zimbabwe claims it costs R56 million (US $20 million) to run antipoaching programmes to protect its black rhinos-Africa's largest remaining and most severely threatened population-but the allocated budget is only half that amount. According to Mr Thomsen, it is not the elephant issue which needs more attention, but the rather severe situation facing the rhino. Since the late 1970s all five rhino species-the Indian, Sumatran and Javan Rhino in Asia and the Black and White Rhino in Africa have been listed under Appendix 1 of CITES, prohibiting all trade in rhino products. In spite of the ban, the demand for this wildly expensive commodity, used for its medicinal properties to treat everything from epilepsy to malaria, has kept the illegal trade alive and casts doubt on the ban's effectiveness. The World Wide Fund for Nature (WWF) objects to legal trade, but says new ideas and a debate are urgently needed. Perhaps the application of market theory and private property rights to conservation of endangered species would be an enlightening and worthwhile exercise.

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