Giraffes Are One Step Closer To Endangered Species Act Protections After The U.S. Government Agrees To Make A Decision By The End Of 2024
Katie Cleary
In response to a lawsuit by conservation and animal protection groups, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service has agreed to a deadline of November 2024 to decide if giraffes warrant protection under the Endangered Species Act.
“This is a crucial step for giraffes, whose populations are dwindling while products made from their skins and bones flood into the United States,” said Tanya Sanerib, international legal director at the Center for Biological Diversity. “This agreement was desperately needed to help give everyone’s favorite long-necked mammal a shot at federal protections. But during an extinction crisis, it shouldn’t take litigation to get action under the Endangered Species Act. We should be racing to save every species we can.”
With fewer than only 69,000 mature individualsremaining in the wild, giraffe populations have declined nearly 40% in the past three decades due to habitat loss, civil unrest, poaching, trophy hunting, and human-caused habitat changes. The international trade in giraffe parts—bone carvings, skins and trophies—puts additional pressure on these iconic animals.
“This was a long, overdue step to protecting giraffes. The United States is a top importer and seller of giraffe parts—including heads, legs, feet, tails, and skins—and a leading contributor to the threat of extinction of the species. The demand for these items is deplorable and an Endangered Species Act listing will strengthen the ability to combat this horrific domestic market,” said Adam Peyman, wildlife programs director for Humane Society International.
Protection under the Endangered Species Act would help curb U.S. imports and sale of giraffe bones, skins, and other parts,while also increasing funding for the conservation of the species. During a recent 10-year period, the United States imported more than one giraffe hunting trophy per day on average and more than 21,400 giraffe bone carvings. Many imported giraffe parts are turned into frivolous decorative items such as pillows, boots, and jackets as revealed by a 2018 undercover investigation by Humane Society International and the Humane Society of the United States.
Parties to CITES (the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species)decided in 2019 to regulate international trade in giraffes by requiring export permits. Because these protections do not foreclose the giraffe trade and because of the species’ decline, conservation safeguards are crucial in countries like the United States that have a thriving market for giraffe body parts.
Yesterday’s agreement to set a November 2024 deadline to decide on the protection of giraffes under the Endangered Species Act provides a much-needed step toward reversing the role of the U.S. market in the decline of this iconic and irreplaceable species.