Last hope for great apes is vaccination against the rapid onslaught of disease (Guardian)
Vaccine campaigns to protect wild chimpanzees, gorillas and orang-utans could be the only hope of preventing the planets remaining great apes from suffering catastrophic population crashes, scientists have warned.
They say that recent surveys of several populations of great apes have revealed devastating drops in numbers and that protective steps must now be taken as a matter of urgency.
One report, published last week, revealed that numbers of Grauers gorilla, the largest of all the great apes, had plunged from 17,000 to fewer than 4,000 over the past 20 years. Other reports have said that devastating forest fires in Indonesia, in addition to the spread of palm oil plantations, have wiped out thousands of square miles of rainforest, the home of the orang-utan. Again, species numbers have plummeted.
Several factors are involved in the terrible losses that are occurring in our fellow great apes, said Peter Walsh, a primate ecologist at Cambridge. However, diseases some spread by humans are the ones that we can do most about in the short term.
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more: www.theguardian.com/environment/2016/apr/10/great-apes-face-existential-threat-as-populations-plunge-ebola-vaccines