
哥伦比亚官员周一批准了一项计划,拟对数十头在该国中部地区自由活动的河马实施扑杀。这些河马最早由臭名昭著的毒枭巴勃罗·埃斯科巴引入,多年来不断繁殖,不仅威胁当地居民安全,也挤占本土物种的生存空间。
环境部长伊雷内·贝莱斯表示,过去用于控制河马数量的措施成本高昂且效果有限,包括对部分个体实施绝育或将其转移至动物园。她表示,此次批准的措施将涉及80多头河马,但未说明扑杀何时开始。
贝莱斯表示:“如果不采取行动,我们将无法控制其种群数量。为了保护生态系统,我们必须这样做。”
哥伦比亚是非洲以外唯一拥有野生河马种群的国家。这些河马是上世纪80年代埃斯科巴引入的四头河马的后代。当时他在马格达莱纳河谷修建了占地广阔的纳波莱斯庄园,内设私人动物园和专用飞机跑道,这里曾作为他的乡间据点。
哥伦比亚国立大学(Colombia’s National University)发布的一项研究估计,2022年该国约有170头河马在野外活动。
近来,人们在距离该庄园以北100多公里的地区也发现了河马的踪迹。
哥伦比亚环境部门表示,这些大型哺乳动物对当地居民构成威胁,已有村民在农场和河流中与其遭遇。同时,它们还与海牛等本土物种争夺食物和生存空间。
尽管问题严峻,但这些河马也逐渐成为一种旅游资源。纳波莱斯庄园周边的村庄纷纷推出“观赏河马”旅游项目,并售卖河马主题的纪念品。
这些河马如今也成了纳波莱斯庄园的一大看点。该庄园在政府没收埃斯科巴资产后被改建为主题公园,设有游泳池、水上滑梯以及动物园,园内还饲养着多种非洲动物。
哥伦比亚的动物保护人士一直以来反对扑杀河马这一做法,认为这些动物同样有生存的权利。他们还指出,以暴力手段解决问题,对这个经历了数十年内部冲突的国家来说,是一个不良示范。
参议员、动物权利活动人士安德烈亚·帕迪利亚将此次扑杀计划称为“残忍”的决定,并指责政府只想走捷径。她曾参与推动禁止斗牛的立法。
帕迪利亚在X平台上写道:“杀戮和屠杀永远不可接受。这些都是健康的动物,却成了政府失职的受害者。”
过去12年间,历经三届政府,哥伦比亚一直尝试通过给部分河马实施绝育来控制其种群数量。但由于捕捉这些危险动物并进行手术成本高昂,始终难以大规模推进相关措施。
此外,由于哥伦比亚的河马基因库有限,且可能携带疾病,将它们送回非洲原生栖息地一直被认为不具备可行性。(财富中文网)
翻译:郝秀
审校:汪皓
哥伦比亚官员周一批准了一项计划,拟对数十头在该国中部地区自由活动的河马实施扑杀。这些河马最早由臭名昭著的毒枭巴勃罗·埃斯科巴引入,多年来不断繁殖,不仅威胁当地居民安全,也挤占本土物种的生存空间。
环境部长伊雷内·贝莱斯表示,过去用于控制河马数量的措施成本高昂且效果有限,包括对部分个体实施绝育或将其转移至动物园。她表示,此次批准的措施将涉及80多头河马,但未说明扑杀何时开始。
贝莱斯表示:“如果不采取行动,我们将无法控制其种群数量。为了保护生态系统,我们必须这样做。”
哥伦比亚是非洲以外唯一拥有野生河马种群的国家。这些河马是上世纪80年代埃斯科巴引入的四头河马的后代。当时他在马格达莱纳河谷修建了占地广阔的纳波莱斯庄园,内设私人动物园和专用飞机跑道,这里曾作为他的乡间据点。
哥伦比亚国立大学(Colombia’s National University)发布的一项研究估计,2022年该国约有170头河马在野外活动。
近来,人们在距离该庄园以北100多公里的地区也发现了河马的踪迹。
哥伦比亚环境部门表示,这些大型哺乳动物对当地居民构成威胁,已有村民在农场和河流中与其遭遇。同时,它们还与海牛等本土物种争夺食物和生存空间。
尽管问题严峻,但这些河马也逐渐成为一种旅游资源。纳波莱斯庄园周边的村庄纷纷推出“观赏河马”旅游项目,并售卖河马主题的纪念品。
这些河马如今也成了纳波莱斯庄园的一大看点。该庄园在政府没收埃斯科巴资产后被改建为主题公园,设有游泳池、水上滑梯以及动物园,园内还饲养着多种非洲动物。
哥伦比亚的动物保护人士一直以来反对扑杀河马这一做法,认为这些动物同样有生存的权利。他们还指出,以暴力手段解决问题,对这个经历了数十年内部冲突的国家来说,是一个不良示范。
参议员、动物权利活动人士安德烈亚·帕迪利亚将此次扑杀计划称为“残忍”的决定,并指责政府只想走捷径。她曾参与推动禁止斗牛的立法。
帕迪利亚在X平台上写道:“杀戮和屠杀永远不可接受。这些都是健康的动物,却成了政府失职的受害者。”
过去12年间,历经三届政府,哥伦比亚一直尝试通过给部分河马实施绝育来控制其种群数量。但由于捕捉这些危险动物并进行手术成本高昂,始终难以大规模推进相关措施。
此外,由于哥伦比亚的河马基因库有限,且可能携带疾病,将它们送回非洲原生栖息地一直被认为不具备可行性。(财富中文网)
翻译:郝秀
审校:汪皓
Colombian officials on Monday authorized a plan to cull dozens of hippos roaming freely through a region in the center of the country, where they threaten villagers and displace native species years after notorious drug lord Pablo Escobar brought in the first ones.
Environment Minister Irene Vélez said previous methods to control their population have been expensive and unsuccessful, including neutering some of the animals or moving them to zoos. Vélez said up to 80 hippos would be affected by the measure. She did not say when hunting would begin.
“If we don’t do this we will not be able to control the population,” Vélez said. “We have to take this action to preserve our ecosystems.”
Colombia is the only country outside of Africa with a wild hippo population. The hippos are the descendants of four brought to the country in the 1980s by Escobar as he built a private zoo in Hacienda Nápoles, a gigantic ranch in the Magdalena River valley with a private landing strip that served as his rural abode.
A study published by Colombia’s National University estimated that around 170 hippos were roaming freely in the country in 2022.
Recently, hippos have been spotted in areas that are more than 100 kilometers (60 miles) north of the ranch.
Environmental authorities in Colombia say the mammals pose a threat to villagers who have encountered them in farms and rivers. They also compete for food and space against local species such as river manatees.
Despite the challenges, the hippos have also become a tourist attraction, with residents of villages surrounding Hacienda Nápoles offering hippo spotting tours and selling hippo-themed souvenirs.
The hippos are also one of the main attractions at the Nápoles ranch, which was confiscated by Colombia’s government as it seized Escobar’s properties. It now functions as a theme park, featuring swimming spools, water slides and a zoo that includes several other African species.
Animal welfare activists in Colombia have long opposed proposals to kill the hippos, arguing they deserve to live. They say that addressing the problem through violence sets a poor example for a country that has gone through decades of internal conflict.
Andrea Padilla, a senator and animal rights activist who helped draft a law against bullfights in Colombia, described the plan to cull the hippos as a “cruel” decision, and accused government officials of trying to take the easy way out.
“Killings and massacres will never be acceptable,” Padilla wrote on X. “These are healthy creatures who are victims of the negligence” of government entities.
Over the past 12 years, spanning three presidential administrations, Colombia has tried to neuter some of the hippos in a bid to reduce their population. But the initiatives have had limited scope due to high costs that come with capturing the dangerous animals and performing surgeries on them.
Because Colombia’s hippos come from a limited gene pool and could carry diseases, taking them back to their natural habitat in Africa has been considered unfeasible.