Starting a New Life as an Anti-Poaching Ranger

The poacher is the lowest part of the chain and often easily replaced. Killing of a poacher will reveal no valuable information, but merely escalate a conflict. The primary goal is to apprehend the poacher alive or follow him to his doorstep and through other means unravel the organized network. The probability of getting caught and sentenced is crucial in preventing crime, and tracking is crucial in this context in bush environments.1

The purpose of this article is to show you the purpose and activities of anti-poaching units (APU), especially if your dream is to start a new life elsewhere while committing yourself to wildlife conservation.

As allegedly reported by the news, the demand for animals part is still very high in the Far East, as poaching knows no crisis.

For this reason, in July 2018, I decided to attend a two-week course in order to pair my expertise in tracking with skills related to wildlife conservation. That is how my personal path as a Conservation Ranger began, after successfully passing the final examinations.

In this article, I will focus on what it means to be prepared to face any dangerous situation as a ranger committed to wildlife conservation in medium/high risk countries, with constant political, social, and economic instability.

A Day in the Life of Poachers

Three men armed with AK-47s leave their homes before sun-rise and head for a bush land area they know very well. After following tracks for about an hour, they spot their target: a female rhino with her calf at about 100 meters. The favorable wind allows them to approach the rhinos without being identified. Furthermore, rhinos have highly limited vision, which gives the three men an additional advantage.

Once at a proper distance and position, the three men fire a few shots at the rhino cow’s pachyderm, making it impossible for her to escape. The calf, as often happens, stays close to the injured mother trying to protect her and is mowed down by a gust of 7.62X39 rounds. The calf has not yet developed the sought after horn. Nonetheless, it is killed because its attempt to protect the mother hinders the three mens’ ability to chop the mother’s horn and quicky escape.

The three men rapidly approach the immobilized rhino cow, who is stiff from pain. While the wounded prey tries to get up, the men break its spine with a series of axe blows. While the dying animal foams from the pain, the men begin removing her horn with a “panga” or an axe. Sometimes, the entire front of the rhino’s head is amputated to speed the process along.2

Every day this scene repeats itself. This means that over a thousand rhinos are slaughtered every year.

Although there is a slightly decreasing trend (which could be interpreted as a sign of hope), this does not actually reflect a decrease in demand. In fact, it sadly represents a scarcity of rhinos remaining in the wild.

Demand Driving Poaching Activities

The most shocking aspect of rhino poaching is the reason behind their slaughter.

The most pressing demand for rhino horn comes from the Far East. Particularly consumer markets in China and Vietnam where rhino horn is considered to be a powerful remedy for various diseases.

However, scientific research has repeatedly highlighted that rhino horn is nothing more than keratinous tissue, very similar to human nails and completely devoid of any medical function. Fortunately, the demand for rhino horn is decreasing sharply from Yemen, where it was traditionally used to make “jambiyaceremonial knives.

Highly efficient criminal organizations, with the connivance of local institutions, smuggle rare animal parts. When measured in volume, wildlife trafficking is the fourth largest illegal trafficking market in the world following weapons, drugs, and human trafficking. Just think about the volume of it.

Who are the Poachers?

The lowest level of poachers are generally local poachers.

The weapons used are rifles, pointed poles, nets and traps. The latter include snares, which function by shrinking until they tear the animal’s flesh and lead to a slow death. Snares kill indiscriminately and have been known to catch elephants, cheetahs, antelopes, and giraffes. Thousands of animals die through the use of snares; however, the carcass is not even recovered in 70% of these cases.

The more sophisticated poachers tend to be wealthy entrepreneurs, unscrupulous politicians, or individuals involved in other criminal activity. These individuals tend to hire poachers and equip them with a variety of tools, including boats and helicopters.

What is the Life of a Rhino Worth?

Native poachers settle for a few hundred dollars to kill a specimen. However, due to the strong Chinese and Vietnamese demand, a kilogram of rhino horn can cost up to $60,000 to the end user. This equals about $350,000 for a medium-sized horn.

Rhinos have become the symbol of a macabre trade that also affects many other animal species. Elephants, for example, are in demand due to their ivory. The primary market tends to be China, where it is converted into molds, stamps, and artwork.

Tigers are also implicated in the demand for wildlife product. Their fur, bowels, and even bones are believed to be endowed with healing powers in traditional Chinese medicine.

Even the noblest symbol of the African continent, the lion, is sadly not immune to poaching and deforestation. CITES, the international body responsible for monitoring flora and fauna, has included the lion on its list of animals at risk of extinction.

Anti-Poaching Units

Some African countries, such as Kenya, Botswana, Namibia, Zimbabwe, and South Africa, have taken concrete steps to combat poaching. These countries tend to use specialized personnel. They consist of “Anti-Poaching Units”: teams of specialized rangers, sometimes made up of ex-soldiers, whose job is to prevent poaching.

The activities carried out by APUs are varied and cover prevention, deterrence, and intervention.

Tasks and Responsibilities of APUs

Prevention includes the employment of microchips inserted in the horns of the rhinos, intended to monitor the specimens and to guarantee the possible capture of the poachers. Furthermore, the preventive cutting of the horn is another method used to stop poaching. However, this technique has sometimes proved ineffective because poachers, after following the tracks of a rhino for hours, do not hesitate to shoot it down so as to not run into a hornless specimen again.

Deterrence tasks involve perimeter surveillance of reserves and setting up roadblocks for the control of suspicious vehicles.

Operational intervention involves the organization of teams responsible for the intensive patrolling of vast areas of forest or savannah in search of any tracks left by poachers. This activity is the most dangerous because the legal penalties inflicted on poachers can motivate them to use their weapons against the APU. Such a situation may result in deadly outcomes for both sides.

For operational intervention, tracking is heavily used.

Tracking is no mystery, but plain practical skills that can be acquired through training like anything else. … A single tracker that points out a direction or sector of a fugitive, can within minutes have saved the work of hundreds of personnel trying to catch a glimpse of the person in any direction, and thus help optimize the use of resources in the search.A trained tracker can quickly discern from movement patterns also characteristics about the subject, although this is at the more experienced level.1

The valuable quote above perfectly displays how tracking can be indispensable when it comes to tracking animals as well as poachers, even when deceptive tactics like brushing out the tracks, changing shoes, or even walking on a blanket are put to use.

Anit-Poaching International Organizations

Various international organizations play a role in the aforementioned activities, including Conservation Rangers Operations Worldwide (C.R.O.W.) The mission of C.R.O.W. is to create a standard of professionalism that will be useful for fighting increasingly dangerous and well-equipped poachers.

The WWF reports that in 2018 about 40% of APU rangers indicate that the training received is outdated and inadequate to prepare them for the realities of their job.

In Europe and North America, the poaching of rare species is a mere media phenomenon and therefore does not feel like part of our reality. However, in Africa and Asia it is a real conflict in which the financial interests of some clash with the determined desire to defend nature and the future of our planet.

We hope that for once it is not the economic interest that prevails, but the sense of responsibility towards nature and future generations.

Conservation Rangers Operations Worldwide (C.R.O.W.)

C.R.O.W. is a 501(c)(3) non-profit organization registered in the U.S. Our mission, as an international educational institution, is to establish and train APU rangers to a set standard in the skills necessary for conservation efforts. Our final goal is to raise the bar for quality APU training, provide volunteer APU rangers to parks in need, and provide researchers to parks in need.

 

1Sign and the Art of Tracking“, Christian Nellmann, Jack Kearney and Stig Nårstad, 2011

2Andy Martin, Conservation Rangers Operations Worldwide Chief Instructor and C.E.O.

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