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Hippopotamus Endangered Species Report Essay Research Paper

Hippopotamus: Endangered Species Report Essay, Research Paper


The Hippopotamus: Endangered Species Report


Jason Wapiennik Mr. Trippeer, Biology January 6th, 1997


The ban on elephant ivory trading has slowed down the poaching of elephants, but


now poachers are getting their ivory from another creature, the hippopotamus.


For the poacher, the hippo is an easy target. They stay together for long hours


in muddy water pools, as many as eighty-one can be found in a single square mile.


This concentration is so big it’s only second to that of the elephant.


Poachers kill the animal, then pick out the teeth and sell them for as much as


seventy dollars per kilo. This is a very cheap price. Elephant ivory sells for


as much as five-hundred dollars per kilo. The reason the price-per-kilo is so


slow is because hippo ivory is very brittle compared to the much stronger


elephant ivory.


Elephant ivory is no longer at the biggest risk for poaching; hippo ivory is.


Eastern Zaire once had one of the largest hippo populations in the world, around


23,000 hippos. According to a count done in 1994, this number has now dropped


to 11,000. The 1989 ban on elephant ivory is the main cause attributed to the


exponential rise to hippo ivory trade.


“European and African activists are petitioning advocacy groups, including last


week’s annual Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species in Florida,


for a ban on hippo poaching. But they say they’re a long way from putting an


end to the slaughter.” (Howard & Koehl)


The hippopotamus is an enormous amphibious animal with smooth, hairless skin.


Hippos can be found in Liberia, the Ivory Coast, and a few can also be found in


Sierra Leone and Guinea. Hippos used to be found anywhere south of the Sahara


Desert where they could find enough water and plenty of room to graze. Now, due


to poachers and predation they are confined to protected areas, but they can


still sometimes be seen in many major rivers and swamps.


Hippos need water

that is deep enough to cover them, but it also has to be very


close to a pasture. They must wallow in the water because their thin, hairless


skin is vulnerable to overheating and dehydration. Hippos were once thought to


sweat blood. Actually, hippos secrete a pinkish colored oil that helps them


keep their skin moist in the hot African climate.


Hippos are herbivores. They prefer the short grass of African plains to any


other possible food. They normally eat up to eighty-eight pounds of this grass


nightly, which they mow away a large patch at a time with their twenty-inch


muscular lips. Hippos spend most of their days in the water or wallowing in the


mud, only coming up on land to feed at night.


Hippos defecate in the water. Their dung provides essential basic elements for


the food chain. Tiny microorganisms feed on it and then larger animals feed on


those organisms. On land, hippos’ large bodies make trails through the


vegetation that other animals may use for easy access to water holes. Because


hippos’ favorite food is short grass, they keep these grasses well-trimmed which


may help to prevent grass fires. Hippos are an important part of the African


ecosystem.


If the hippos become extinct, and the likelihood grows more and more each day,


the repercussions it may have on the fragile African ecosystem are tremendous.


Imagine a brush fire consuming acres of previously-livable land under the hot


African sun. These people have no way to put out fires like we do here in the


U.S.. The fires in California were barely maintainable. In short, if the hippos


die, everything dependent on the hippo and it’s way-of-life also suffers.


Brust, Beth W. Zoobooks: Hippos. San Diego: Wildlife Education, Ltd., 1989.


Estes, Richard. The Safari Companion. Simon & Schuster, 1991.


MacDonald, David (ed.). The Encyclopedia of Mammals. Vol. 2. London: George,


Allen & Unwin, 1984.


Redmond, Ian. “Africa’s Four Legged Whale,” Wildlife Conservastion. Jan.-Feb.


1991, pp 60-69.

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