Is Africa's wildlife being eaten to extinction? 
The rapid growth in the global demand for bushmeat is leaving many African  species facing the possibility of being eaten out of existence, says Mark Jones.  In this week's Green Room, he calls for western nations to do more to tackle the  problem of illegal imports of bushmeat.
   |    The increasing value of bushmeat has attracted criminal  syndicates, with sophisticated and efficient logistical capabilities   | 
We've all heard how the illegal trade in elephant ivory, rhino horn and other  high value products is threatening Africa's wildlife. 
However, the impact of these products is dwarfed by the trade in bushmeat,  defined as meat from Africa's wild animals traded for human consumption. 
According to the Bushmeat Crisis Task Force, the hunting of and trade in  bushmeat represents "the most significant immediate threat to the future of  wildlife in Africa". 
Traditionally, bushmeat hunting was a subsistence activity. 
It is now a multi-billion dollar international trade involving hundreds of  species, from forest herbivores such as duikers and other antelopes to wild  pigs, rodents, elephants and primates. 
The exponential increase in the trade over recent years is being driven by  demand from the exploding and ever more urbanised human population in Africa,  and the increasing international value and demand for bushmeat products. 
Commercial logging and the associated infrastructure development and  expansion have given hunters easy access to previously impenetrable African  forests, and ready-made transport routes to towns and cities. 
Unsustainable consumption
The term bushmeat is normally used in reference to the illegal trade. 
The trade may be illegal because the species concerned is protected under  national or international laws, the method of killing is prohibited, or because  the animal is taken from a protected area. 
The food source was originally exploited because of its low cost, lack of  ownership issues, weak law enforcement and the lack of alternatives.
   |  Bush pigs, duikers, and monkeys for sale at a market in  Gabon  | 
Now, the increasing value of bushmeat has attracted criminal syndicates, with  sophisticated and efficient logistical capabilities. 
Law enforcement agencies in many African countries do not have the resources  to keep up, and in some cases high level involvement in the trade may protect it  from official interference. 
This makes accurate estimates of the trade difficult to obtain, although  Central African consumers alone may be eating more than 2.5m tonnes each year.  
Many target species have already been extirpated from parts of West Africa.  Wildlife in Eastern and Southern African countries is increasingly being  targeted, and Kenya is estimated to have experienced a loss of about 50% in its  wildlife in recent decades, largely as a result of the bushmeat trade. 
A recent study, involving researchers from the Zoological Society of London,  estimated that as much as 270 tonnes of bushmeat might be coming through a  single airport in Paris annually, destined both for personal consumption and to  supply the lucrative trade in high value products. 
It is also estimated that more than a quarter of all mammal species hunted  for bushmeat are threatened with extinction. 
Feeling the loss
Widespread hunting of animals for bushmeat depletes populations of affected  species, and can lead to local population crashes or extirpation. 
There are, however, much wider potential impacts. 
Species have functions: as prey for other species, seed dispersers or forest  rebuilders. So reductions in certain species can have far reaching impacts on  others, causing a loss of biodiversity and a crisis within ecosystems.
   |  Ghanaians started breeding their own bushmeat rather than hunting  it  | 
The loss of biodiversity leaves us with a predominance of a few so-called  "weedy species", such as those that thrive in continually disturbed,  human-dominated environments. 
Small populations of highly endangered animals can be disproportionately  affected. 
Although the number of Great Apes involved in the bushmeat trade is small,  their removal can have devastating impacts on populations, and Great Ape species  in Africa are thought to be at risk of extinction over the next two decades if  the trade continues at its current rate. 
The commercial bushmeat trade also threatens the livelihoods and food  security of indigenous rural people, which can result in social and political  instability. 
Bushmeat can also carry potentially devastating diseases - from anthrax to  ebola, monkey pox to retroviruses - that may have disastrous impacts on  livestock and far-reaching consequences for human health. 
Food for thought
For the bushmeat trade to be controlled so that it does not cause further  decimation of Africa's wildlife, multi-faceted solutions need urgently to be put  in place. 
As renowned conservationist Ian Redmond suggests, we need to aim for the  trade to be Legal, Sustainable, and Disease Free. 
Until recently, most conservation projects concerned with bushmeat have  tended to focus on research, education, and enforcement, with few attempts to  provide alternative livelihoods or food sources. 
Many of the countries central to the trade are poor and suffer from  corruption.
   |  Chimpanzees carry viruses which can jump to humans  | 
These countries need resources, incentives and training if they are to apply  and enforce national and international regulations. 
Prosecution of illegal traders often fail because of inadequate availability  of resources to identify the type of meat concerned, so laboratories need to be  set up to enable simple and inexpensive forensic services. 
In importing countries, bushmeat is often not considered a high priority by  customs authorities when compared with, for example, drugs or arms; so the  profile of bushmeat in the international enforcement arena needs to be raised.  
Extensive public awareness programmes are required, aimed at educating people  at all levels of the trade. 
A number of umbrella organisations have been established in recent years to  try and improve local education, such as the Bushmeat-free Eastern Africa  Network (BEAN) initiative. Some have been very successful. 
However, far more effort is needed, with co-ordination at an international  level. 
Perhaps most importantly, people who currently rely on the illegal bushmeat  trade for their livelihood or as an essential protein source need to be given  alternative options; and herein lies arguably the greatest challenge. 
Some good initiatives exist, including the development of fish farms,  apiaries, and arable agriculture projects. Many more are required if the trade  is to be significantly reduced. 
Local actions to curb the bushmeat trade need to be resourced through global  responses, requiring significant investment at a time of international financial  instability and introspection. 
If Africa's unique wildlife, and its rural communities, are to survive the  impacts of the bushmeat trade, continued well-directed development aid for the  poor countries of Africa throughout this period of global financial uncertainty  is essential. 
Mark Jones is programmes and fundraising director of Care for the Wild  International, a UK-based conservation charity
The Green Room is a series of opinion articles on environmental topics  running weekly on the BBC News website
Do you agree with Mark Jones? Are a growing number of African species  facing the possibility of being eaten out of existence? Do Western nations need  to do more to tackle the problem of illegal bushmeat imports? Or are there more  pressing issues that are threatening global biodiversity?
I am completely agreed with Mark Jones. The bushmeat trade could eliminate  all viable populations of African apes within the next 5-15 years. It is not  just confined to Africa, the bushmeat trade is global phenomenon. The demand for  bushmeat will continue to rise with the ever increasing populatations. Besides,  people have been infected with HIV viruses from consuming primates. So, it is  the time to tackle this vulnerable crisis for saving biodiversity.
Engr  Salam, LGED,Bangladesh
The 'bushmeat' industry is out of hand. It also spreads to such things as  unsustainable extraction of prawns from Lake St. Lucia by overseas  syndicates.
Rosanne Clark, Himeville, South Africa
I quite dispute that the term "bush meat" is usually used in reference to the  illegal trade of wild animals in Africa. Africa also has a significant number of  game reserves to protect and serve as a sanctuary for animals in the wild. Bush  meat is rather a common term amongst africans, refering to wild animals typical  to some but not all those species mentioned.I would clearly attribute the phrase  as wild meat specific for the purpose of consumption eg "game". However a large  number are not protected species due to the fact that most of these African  countries are truly faced with more pressing issues than passing legislation to  protect grass cutters,antelopes including some breed of apes. Even in Africa,  protection of wildlife exists prohibiting the sale and export of tigers,  elephants, lions and rhino. The exploitation of these animals i have just  mentioned is not neccessary for food but are widely sought for their ornamental,  symbolic and medicinal value on an international large scale. we should be able  to distinguish between "bush meat" and those animal species requiring  protection.
Mark Adedeji, London
Yes i agree with Jones report,but what the government and the international  community needs to understands is that as long as poverty keeps on increasing  this hunting of endangered species will not stopt because as you already know it  is a lifly hood for many families in the rural areas especially in Cameroon,  Garbon, CAR, Ghana ctc. Beside that government strategy and policies to combate  this activities are to weak or insufficient to meet any progress, for example in  Cameroon to get a licence and to own a gun its very expensive and difficult as  such the hunters or local people prefered to go underground to buy illegal guns  to carry on thier illegal activities. A articipatory approach is needed were the  hunters or local people are allow to take part in disscussions and meetings  concerning the importance of the protection of endangered speciers and they  should be given some incentives and motivation if not then give them Jobs so  that they can be able to feed thier families.
Tanke Samson,  Finland
A sustainable diverse ecology is of paramount importance not only for the  mere survival of species but for the next generation to enjoy them as well. It  is a legacy that must be preserved as a prosterity. How selfish it is to eat out  animals to extintion whilst succeeding generations can only see them in  photographs. The athourities should manage the life stock inventory and monitor  their hunting or harvesting to curtail animal meat commercialisation. 
Mr. Steven Marcial, Arima, Trinidad.
"..the trade in bushmeat, defined as meat from Africa's wild animals traded  for human consumption. The term bushmeat is normally used in reference to the  illegal trade." Bushmeat is simply meat from wild animals. Simples..as Aleksandr  Orlov would say. The article provided a good insight and made a good read. For  majority of the people though, it is still a subsistence activity.
JO,  Tooting, London