Double threat decimates apes
Hunting and the Ebola
virus killing chimpanzees and gorillas.
7 April 2003
JOHN WHITFIELD
This story is from the News section of the journal
Nature
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| Ebola
has killed up to 90% of apes in
some areas. |
| © R.
Parwell |
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Chimpanzees and gorillas in West Africa are caught in a pincer
movement between hunting and the Ebola virus, researchers have
warned. The bushmeat trade is threatening their populations near
towns, while Ebola is killing almost nearly every animal in some
remote areas.
In a paper published in this week's Nature, ecologist Peter Walsh
of Princeton University, New Jersey, reports that populations of
both species have plunged by about half over the past twenty years1. Walsh calls for the conservation status
of each to be shifted from 'endangered' to 'critically endangered'.
The finding that apes that live near people are in decline
because of hunting confirms the long-standing suspicions of
conservation workers. But the extent of Ebola's reach in the ape
populations has taken experts by surprise. In one remote area where
there is little or no hunting, it has cut the population by more
than 90% since 1991.
Everyone agrees that the populations are under threat, but John
Oates of the City University of New York, author of the IUCN's 1996
status survey and action plan for African apes, thinks that
reclassifying them based on this evidence would be premature. It is
not known whether these declines are repeated across Africa, he
says, and it is also unclear how the picture might differ between
chimpanzees and gorillas.
Government officials in Gabon, where the survey took place, say
that chimpanzees and gorillas are already protected there, and that
every effort is made to stop illegal hunting. "The population of
apes has been quite stable recently," says Pierre Ngavoura, director
of water and forests at Gabon's Ministry of Water, Forests,
Fisheries and the Environment.
Counting the cost
Walsh's team counted animals by surveying overnight sleeping
nests in many areas, giving a combined population for chimpanzees
and gorillas. Gorilla populations in neighbouring Congo - the other
remaining population stronghold of these apes in West Africa - are
thought to be experiencing similarly high mortality.
 |
An
experimental Ebola vaccine might
work
in apes too. |
| © P.
Walsh |
|
|
The Ebola epidemic may be a consequence of high ape population
density, says Alexander Harcourt, a primatologist at the University
of California, Davis. "The normal density of gorillas is about one
every 2 square kilometres," he says. "but in some of these regions
there are ten in every square kilometre."
Another possibility, says wildlife-disease expert Andrew
Cunningham of the Institute of Zoology in London, is that
environmental changes, such as human encroachment on the forest,
have brought apes and the virus into more contact. "The mortality
suggests that there has been some trigger leading to the emergence
of Ebola as an important cause of ape mortality," he says. The Ebola
virus is thought to reside in an unidentified reservoir species -
possibly a fruit bat or other small mammal.
Spread of disease
Ebola spreads from apes to humans when a hunter kills and eats an
animal, or when someone comes into contact with an infected ape
corpse. The government in Gabon is seeking to educate its people
about the risks of ape hunting, Ngavoura says.
An Ebola outbreak in Gabon killed 50 people between December 2001
and March 2002, mostly in the remote areas where the ape disease is
worst. A current outbreak in Congo has killed 120, according to the
World Health Organization.
A further potential hazard is created by commercial poachers who
hunt bushmeat for sale in urban Africa, says Richard Ruggiero,
African programme officer for the US Fish and Wildlife Service.
"It's a very dangerous situation in terms of global health," he
says. "I don't think there's a city in the world with a West African
immigrant population that doesn't receive ape meat."
|
I don't think there's a
city in the world with a
West African immigrant
population that doesn't
receive ape meat
|
|
Richard Ruggiero
US Fish and Wildlife
Service
|
|
|
Options to control the disease among apes include cutting or
digging barriers to quarantine infected populations, moving apes
away from where the epidemic is raging, or culling the reservoir
species, if it can be identified.
An experimental vaccine has shown good results in monkeys2, and may be ready for human trials in a
year or two, says Gary Nabel, director of the US National Institutes
of Health's Vaccine Research Centre in Bethesda, Maryland. The
vaccine might work for apes too, he says. "We'd very much like to
use it to help." |