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  1. The African Elephant: A Myreportlinks.Com Book (Endangered and Threatened Animals) by John Albert Torres, 2004-06-21

81. MetaCrawler Results | Search Query = Photos Of Endangered Species
of the World in Danger endangered and threatened Listing of animal photos, visitthe Animal Gallery endangered Mammals elephants African Elephant
http://search.metacrawler.com/texis/search?q=Photos Of Endangered Species

82. Endangered And Threatened Species - All-Info About Science For Families
endangered Species Kids Corner Where can you find information on endangered andthreatened species? What can you and your school do to help save them?
http://scienceforfamilies.allinfo-about.com/subjects/endangeredsp.html
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Click here to find out more Endangered Species Alaska's Endangered Species Wildlife conservation from Alaska Department of Fish and Game. Animal Info.org Information about rare, threatened and endangered mammals. The Endangered Animals of the World The purpose of this ongoing project is to allow students from all over the world a chance to help foster knowledge and appreciation for the plight of the many thousands of endangered animals of the Earth. Students will gain valuable skills for researching, collaborating and telecommunicating while sharing their information with people around the world. Endangered Specie.com

83. Controversy Stalks Endangered Species Convention - 3/29/2000 - ENN News - Enviro
The most endangered species are listed under Appendix 1 Appendix II comprises threatenedspecies that may propose listing all African elephants under Appendix I
http://www.enn.com/enn-news-archive/2000/03/03292000/citeseleven_11493.asp
Site Index: Home News ENN Earthnews Affiliates News In-Depth Topics Interact Online Quizzes Postcards Marketplace Advanced Search Advertise Join ENN e-mail Subscription Take our Survey Affiliate Tech Center Post Press Release Help About ENN Site Map Controversy stalks endangered species convention Wednesday, March 29, 2000 By Margot Higgins
The future of ivory trading and its impact on African elephant populations is one of several major conservation issues to be taken up at the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora. Reopening the ivory trade and resuming commercial whaling in Norway and Japan are two of several controversial issues swirling around the upcoming Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora. More than 2,000 representatives of governments, conservation groups and trade organizations are expected to attend this year's CITES meeting April 10-20 in Nairobi, Kenya. At issue are listing decisions that will determine the protection of more than 60 of the world's threatened and endangered species. Conservation and animal welfare groups have anticipated the event since the last CITES conference in Harare, Zimbabwe, in 1997. "It takes a great deal of effort to either add or subtract a species from listing," explained Karen Steuer of the International Fund for Animal Welfare.

84. Vermont Endangered And Threatened Species
Vermont endangered and threatened Species List
http://www.animallaw.info/statutes/stusvt10vsa10.htm

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85. Maine Endangered Species Prohibited Acts
law concerns the improper taking or interference with endangered and threatened species
http://www.animallaw.info/statutes/stusme12_7756.htm

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86. July 31, 1997: Testimony Of Andy Ireland, Feld Entertainment
education, particularly in relation to the elephants and some of the threatenedbig cats. I see this role not only in breeding the endangered species (which
http://resourcescommittee.house.gov/105cong/fishery/jul31.97/feld97.htm
Committee on Resources Witness Testimony Statement of Andy Ireland
Senior Vice President, Feld Entertainment, Inc.
to the Subcommittee on Fisheries Conservation, Wildlife and Oceans
Committee on Resources
United States House of Representatives
Regarding H.R. 1787, The Asian Elephant Conservation Act
July 31, 1997
At Feld Entertainment, the care and protection of exotic and endangered animals has always been an important element of our corporate vision. The Asian elephant, in particular, is one of our most popular animal performers and perhaps the species most commonly associated with The Greatest Show On Earth. THE CO NSERVATION AND EDUCATION VALUE OF PUBLIC DISPLAY Our role as an educator is one which we take very seriously. The affection and awe that elephants generate among our audiences helps focus attention on the current challenge facing the future survival of the species. In fact, studies have shown that the public display of animals contributes to heightened public awareness of the animals themselves and of man's responsibility for their well-being and protection. This is especially true for children, who not only become more aware of the animals and their special needs and abilities, but also experience first hand the importance of caring for and respecting all animals.

87. Education Planet Environment,Animals,Endangered Species Lesson Plans
on the status and trends of the nation's biota Identify populations, species, andecosystems at risk before they become threatened or endangered; Grades 9-12
http://www.educationplanet.com/search/Environment/Animals/Endangered_Species/
Apr. 07, 2003 08:11 PST
Search top educational sites, lessons, supplies and more! Membership Log In User Name: Password: Education Planet -
TelCom Services Teachers - Receive a second year of Lesson Planet for FREE! ... by choosing our Smart Saver Long Distance Program Top Sites this Week Science: Middle School Physical Science Resource Center Math: Project Interactive Social Science: America at War - Time for Kids Language Arts: International Children's Digital Library Project: Stay Safe Online Lesson Plan: Ready.gov from the Department of Homeland Security Top Sites Archives Educational News Schools Seek to Reassure in Wartime Special Education May Get Overhaul Make-A-Wish Foundation Helps Sick Student Go to College
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Endangered Species Subcategories: Amphibians Bears Birds Elephants ... Wolves Most Popular Environment Searches: Acid Rain Earthquakes Elephants Global Warming ... Endangered Species Sponsored Links ABC Neckties - Retailer provides outlet-store prices on neckties by Jerry Garcia, Ruffini, Zylos, Martin Wong, Guccini, Electric, Tabasco Ties, and Endangered Species Neckties.
Contact Lens Plungers - BizRate.com

88. Endangered Species Science National Zoo/ FONZ
Zoological Park The Smithsonian National Zoological Park is proud to participatein many ways with the recovery efforts for endangered and threatened species.
http://natzoo.si.edu/ConservationAndScience/EndangeredSpecies/

Home
Endangered Species
Focus on Science Weekend
Saki monkey born in the Small Mammal House
Spotlight on Zoo Science
Spring Science Lectures at CRC
Never Forgetting: Elephants and Ethics, An International Conference
Population Regulation in Migratory Birds
Climate Change and its Effect on Migratory Birds
Track Silver Moon! To help save wild Asian elephants in Myanmar, Zoo scientists are tracking female elephant Silver Moon through the jungle. Now, you can track Silver Moon's travels too.
National Zoo Accreditation
Captive Breeding Populations Managing Small Populations in Captivity Population Viability ... Micronesian Kingfisher Related Resources About the National Zoo Zoo Scientific Publications Learn more about Smithsonian Natural History Museum Tropical Research Institute Environmental Research Center Endangered species are species that are at immediate risk of going extinct. The primary factors leading to species becoming endangered include habitat loss, pollution, introduction of other species, and overexploitation. What's involved?

89. General Animal Sites
at the Birmingham Zoo, such as elephants, lions, leopards to Z Animal Archive; Alberta'sThreatened Wildlife Learn several animals that are endangered in Alberta
http://www.eagle.ca/~matink/themes/Endanger/genanim.html
Home Page Ontario Curriculum Teacher Resources Libraries ... Themes
General Animal Sites
*** All of the sites listed below have good information on animals. Since they tended
to have information on many animals on one page, it was impossible to separate them
into sites for the "Specific Animals" section.
  • African Safari

  • Find information about many animals at the Birmingham Zoo, such as elephants, lions, leopards and more. Several are "Species Survival Plan Animals".
  • Australian A to Z Animal Archive
    Alberta's Threatened Wildlife

  • Learn about several animals that are endangered in Alberta. Detailed information available for each one. As well, teaching kits are available for many of these species.
  • Animal Bytes Database

  • Animal Bytes were specifically designed to help you quickly find information about some of the unique creatures found in the animal kingdom. Most files include the scientific classification, fun facts, and biological value.
  • Animal Information Database

  • From Sea World, this site has information about many species of endangered animals.

    90. Elephants To Dominate Endangered Species Meeting
    to manage and will leave elephants at the by many environment watchdogs to be threatenedby poachers estimates illegal global trade in endangered species at up
    http://members.aol.com/cmwwrc/marmamnews/97060802.html
    Elephants to dominate endangered species meeting
    By Cris Chinaka HARARE, June 8 (Reuter) - A proposal to resume trade in ivory from the African elephant is expected to be the dominant issue at a world conference on endangered species that starts in Zimbabwe on Monday. The 10-day Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species (CITES) meeting has been preceeded by a spirited debate. CITES officials say the delegates and the public will also be watching decisions on whales. "For us, all the issues on our agenda are important but for many people the conference has become a conference on elephants alone," CITES Secretary-General Izgrev Topkov said last Wednesday when he arrived in the Zimbabwean capital to prepare for the meeting. "We have 115 agenda items. We have 89 tags for species and 75 proposals. The media should not only report on elephants," he complained. The debate on elephants has been sparked by a proposal from three elephant-rich southern African states Botswana, Namibia and Zimbabwe for CITES to lift a seven-year-old world ban in ivory trade and to allow "limited but strictly supervised trade." They and their supporters, notably Japan, argue that ivory trade has never threatened the three countries' elephant herds, saying they were rising even before the 1989 ban, and now at around 150,000, are over twice the land's carrying capacity.

    91. Brookfield Zoo | Field Guide - African Elephant
    Conservation Status endangered (IUCN); threatened (US Department of Adult male Africanelephants weigh over 12,000 pounds, more than four Honda Civics!
    http://www.brookfieldzoo.org/pagegen/htm/fix/fg/fg_body.asp?sAnimal=African elep

    92. Africanews - 73 - April 2002
    We are being threatened both sides a Convention of International Trade in EndangeredSpecies (CITES regulation that opposes totally culling of elephants for the
    http://www.peacelink.it/afrinews/73_issue/p4.html
    AFRICANEWS
    Views and news on peace, justice and reconciliation in Africa
    April 2002
    CONTENTS AFRICANEWS HOMEPAGE
    Zimbabwe
    Elephants cause havoc to endangered community
    By Rodrick Mukumbira Since January this year 11 people from a minority ethnic group have been trampled to death by elephants and as drought persists, the number is likely to increase as the elephants turn to homesteads for food. In the sweltering Zambezi Valley, in the remote part of Binga, 460 kilometres north west of Zimbabwe’s capital, Harare, 70-year-old Tivuke Siamonga recalls how elephants recently trampled down his only son to death. Words fail Siamonga, a member of the minority Tonga tribe resident in the Valley, as he recalls the fateful day. Even as a community renowned traditional healer he knows that elephants are just another mysterious disease afflicting his people and he does not have a remedy. "I don’t have a solution to this rampaging menace of elephants," says Siamonga whose face quickly contorts with pain at the mere mention of the word ‘elephant’. "We were not threatened by elephants before but now they are everywhere. It is not only that we risk being trampled but we are threatened with starvation as the elephants destroy our crops." Although man is known to dominate to creatures and the environment, in the Zambezi valley he has met his match. The elephant has become the most dominant threat not only to man but to the environment as well. The police say since January this year 11 people have been trampled to death in Siamonga’s area. And as drought prevails in this southern African country, the number is likely to increase as the elephants turn to homesteads for food.

    93. Field Trip Earth: Choose A Field Trip
    elephants of Cameroon African elephants (Loxodonta africana) were added to the endangeredspecies list Cameroon, the elephant is further threatened by the
    http://www.fieldtripearth.org/trips.xml
    Choose a Field Trip
    Search:
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    site by webslingerZ

    Red Wolves of Alligator River
    View a slideshow: Red Wolf Highlights
    The red wolf (Canis rufus) suffered huge population and habitat losses throughout the 20th century, and was placed on the Endangered Species List in 1967. The species continued to decline after that, resulting in a 1973 decision to remove them from the wild and place them in captivity for breeding purposes. By 1980, there were no red wolves in the wild.
    In 1987, red wolves were reintroduced to the wild at the Alligator River National Wildlife Refuge in northeastern North Carolina. This reintroduction marked the first attempt to reintroduce a carnivore declared extinct in the wild to a portion of its former range. Today, a free-ranging population of red wolves inhabits about one million acres of federal, private and state lands in northeastern North Carolina.
    Join the Red Wolves of Alligator River trip!

    Elephants of Cameroon
    View a slideshow: Cameroon Elephant Highlights
    African Elephants ( Loxodonta africana ) were added to the endangered species list in 1988. Concern for their survival arose after increasing ivory prices provoked unprecedented poaching during the 1970s.

    94. Conservation Online - News Article
    France noted that NWF supports other provisions of the National Wolf Rule that wouldchange the status of wolves from endangered to threatened in the Western
    http://www.conservationonline.com/nws/001018/nwf01.htm

    95. BUBL LINK / 5:15 Internet Resources: Endangered Species
    bears, marine turtles, rhinos, and elephants. usa Last checked 20000713 ThreatenedSpecies Distribution conservation information about endangered species such
    http://bubl.ac.uk/link/e/endangeredspecies.htm
    BUBL LINK / 5:15 Catalogue of Internet Resources Home Search Subject Menus A-Z ... About
    Endangered species
    A-Z Index Titles Descriptions
  • ACAP: Asian Conservation Awareness Programme
  • Audubon Online
  • David Shepherd Conservation Foundation
  • IUCN Red List of Threatened Species ...
  • Threatened Species Page last updated: 17 March 2003 Comments: bubl@bubl.ac.uk
    ACAP: Asian Conservation Awareness Programme
    An international education campaign, which seeks to raise awareness of endangered species in order to reduce the demand for luxury foods, medicines, trophies, and tourist souvenirs that contribute to the demise in populations. Statistical details, and information about the threats and trade in body parts are provided on specific creatures, including tigers, bears, marine turtles, rhinos, and elephants. There is also a section on Chinese Medicine, as well as news articles, and related links.
    Author: WildAid/ACAP
    Subjects: endangered species
    DeweyClass:
    ResourceType:
    essays
    Location: china, asia
    Last checked:
    Audubon Online
    Society which organises national campaigns, bird conservation initiatives, educational programs, and workshops. Includes profiles of various bird species, a selection of publications and special projects, news, details of local Audubon societies throughout America, and legal information. Membership details are included.
    Author: National Audubon Society
    Subjects: birds, endangered species
  • 96. ScienceDaily News Release: DNA Evidence Suggests 3 Types Of Elephants Roam Afric
    ivory. Thus, while all three genetically distinct types of elephantsare threatened, those in west Africa are now highly endangered. .
    http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2002/09/020916063551.htm
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    DNA Evidence Suggests 3 Types Of Elephants Roam Africa
    Using DNA extracted from the dung of wild elephants in Africa, biologists at the University of California, San Diego have determined that three different types of elephants exist on the African continent. Their discovery, detailed in a paper to be published in the October 7 issue of the Proceedings of the Royal Society, Series B, affirms the existence of the well-known savanna elephant and the recently recognized forest elephant of central Africa. But it also suggests that the elephants of west Africa, which live in both the forest and savanna, represent a third, genetically distinct population that has been diverging from the other two groups for some two million years. Biologists and conservationists now widely accept the designation of two species of elephants: Asian and African. The UCSD discovery could, if confirmed by additional genetic evidence, split the African group into three distinct species or subspecies.

    97. World Animal Day: Elephant
    local wildlife authorities to manage elephants is also on International Trade in EndangeredSpecies of international trade in species threatened with extinction
    http://www.un.org/works/environment/animalplanet/elephant.html
    In circuses and zoos, Hindu temples and even children's books, the elephant has captivated audiences and worshipers through the centuries. Tragically, the world's largest land mammal has also been slaughtered through the ages to feed a worldwide demand for ivory.
    Although there has been an international ban on ivory since 1989, elephants are still threatened by man - and illegal poaching is not the main problem. Loss of habitat is a major obstacle in maintaining both African and Asian elephant populations. In Africa, they are in grave danger and in Asia - where those left are mostly domesticated - their survival is also at risk.
    Today, expanding human settlements, growing population pressures and the spread of agriculture into traditional elephant ranges means that many areas are not available for the herds to travel and forage for food.
    As a result, instances of elephants raiding fields and destroying crops are increasing and clashes between elephants and people have led to nearly 300 human deaths a year. There is pressure on wildlife authorities to kill elephants living near human areas to lower risks. In the early 1970s, the illegal ivory trade was at the highest levels recorded since the beginning of the 20th century. Over 80 per cent of the ivory leaving Africa had been acquired illegally. Poaching is still a large problem in West and Central Africa and continues because, despite the ban, ivory is still traded in some countries and exports are growing in areas of Asia.

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