Poaching crisis Thousands of people try to endanger their lives each year to kill elephants and rhinoceroses. For many people, this seems to be morally wrong, but for wildlife conservationists it is necessary for people to be convicted, but never absolutely of atrocities It seems. This corruption is plaguing South Africa, Kenya, and many national parks and animal reserves in Africa. Rangers in these areas just fought with members and members of the battle group to save their skin and animal ivory.
There are three types of poaching which happen for various reasons and affect various animals. Survival poaching means that people hunted for survival and ate animals they killed. The surviving poachers often kill small animals such as birds, insects, and small antelopes. Commercial poaching is when someone steals money. They do not kill people for survival, they kill people for greed. Demand is boosting commercial poachers. They explore whether animals are in danger of extinction. Finally there is a trophy poaching. The focus of trophy poaching is to kill an endangered animal with a lot of money. These animals include black rhinos, zebras, cheetahs and so on.
It would be beneficial to talk about why animals and plants are on the verge of extinction. For example, one of the reasons is poaching. Poaching is the process of killing rare animals illegally for commercial purposes. Because this is a criminal act, animals can only be sold on the black market. But this problem exists and the government and NGOs have to make every effort to stop this poaching. The second reason is the loss of natural habitat. As new buildings are increasingly entering the wilderness of animals every year, forests are cut down and grasslands are being destroyed for reasons such as new highways. In this case, the wildlife species has no place to go. Even if they have to go somewhere, they can not always settle in new habitats. As a result, they can not survive. The same applies to endangered plants. When humans need more farmland they are often stolen, sold or destroyed.
Hunting and buying and selling illegal wildlife is known as poaching. Poaching is one of the main causes of declining wildlife and disorder of ecological balance, and its main driving force is human desire. For example, the skin, skin and even teeth of animals are highly valued in the market. Besides poaching, biological breeding is another problem that severely puts our environment at risk. Biological piracy is commonly known as illegal invasion of indigenous biomedical knowledge through patents, without compensating indigenous communities that originally developed such knowledge. This practice is usually done by multinational pharmaceutical companies and other companies in developed countries. The threat of biopiracy may take various forms