Great apes are facing an "inevitable crisis"
06/06/2007
Great apes are facing an inevitable crisis arising from climate change a leading conservationist has warned. Dr Richard Leakey said that growing pressure to switch from fossil fuels to biofuels could result in further destruction of the animals' habitats. The chair of WildlifeDirect called for immediate action and proposed financial incentives to save forests from destruction as one possible solution. He said: Climate change will undoubtedly impact everything we know. The great apes - gorillas chimps bonobos and orangutans - are already under threat from habitat destruction poaching logging and disease. The Great Apes Survival Project (Grasp) a United Nations Environment Programme (Unep) initiative has warned that great apes are at risk of imminent extinction unless drastic action is taken. In advance of a talk at the UK's Royal Geographical Society Dr Leakey told journalists that climate threats now had to be added to the mix. The former director of the Kenyan Wildlife Service said: I am concerned about the pressures on the land as a result of changes to the climate but also the pressures on the land in terms of people's reaction to climate change and the shift away from fossil fuels to biofuels.