Elephant DNA Helps Catch Poachers 14
hookedup writes "By mapping the genetic profile of elephant groupings across the African continent, a team of researchers can verify where siezed ivory originated, and alert police to poaching hot spots. The study indicated that 50 percent of the samples tested were accurately located within 300 miles and 80 percent were accurate to within less than 600 miles. While still not a proactive approach, it still is a helpful tool in catching poachers."
Poachers? (Score:2, Funny)
call me cynical (Score:5, Interesting)
I don't know
I caught an interview with one of these guys on the BBC last night, and they didn't manage to explain exactly how this would help. The article makes it clearer, in that it seems to be useful for determining in which areas laws should be tightened or relaxed.
But it should be made clear that there won't be truck loads of mobile biologists roaming the savannah and forests looking for poachers
sad (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:sad (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:DNA Testing Does Not Stop Poachers! (Score:1, Informative)
Umm.. so knowing in which area and which herds the poacher is operating is not useful in catching him. How do you recon that?
That's not the purpose.. (Score:2)
I guess it could also work with one of the other poster's idea of allowing limited tourist-hunting. Sad that it seems impossible just to ban ivory completely..
Other answers - like hunting (Score:2)
The best is hunting. The history of hunting bans and poaching is a very sad one but one thing made clear a long time ago is that where hunting is legal (and, more arguably, where taking ivory is legal), poaching is far less likely.
It works like this: Where hunting is legal, men (they're almost always men) on safari pay utterly ridiculous amounts of money for the privilege of shooting an elephant. The governments hit these g