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Slaughter by poachers takes world's largest hippo herd to brink of extinction

Leyla Linton
Thursday 28 August 2003 19:00 EDT
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What was once the world's largest hippopotamus herd has declined by 95 per cent, the World Wide Fund for Nature said yesterday.

Only 1,300 hippos remain in Virunga National Park, a world heritage site on the eastern border of the Democratic Republic of Congo. Three decades ago there were 29,000, shows a census by WWF and local conservation charities.

Poachers are killing them for their meat and teeth to meet international demand. "This is disastrous," said Dr Susan Liberman, a WWF director. "Unless poaching is stopped, hippos will be threatened with extinction."

Hippo dung is an essential element of the fish-food chain, and as hippo numbers fall, catches have dwindled, affecting the livelihoods and health of local people.

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