Vantara, a wildlife rescue center in Gujarat, has offered to take in 80 hippos from Colombia that were scheduled for euthanasia.
The hippos are descendants of four hippos imported by drug lord Pablo Escobar in 1981.
Colombia declared Hippopotamus amphibius an invasive alien species in March 2022.
A sterilization program began in October 2021 but was deemed ineffective.
Peer-reviewed studies suggest that the hippos have altered ecosystem metabolism and increased nutrient loading in Colombian lakes.
CITES inspected Vantara following allegations of discrepancies in animal imports and initially recommended halting further import permits.
Detailed Insights:
The Colombian government decided to cull the hippos due to their rapid population growth and the high costs associated with managing them.
Moving hippos is difficult due to their thick skin, aquatic habitat, and the risk of capture myopathy, which can lead to death during translocation.
Housing 80 hippos at Vantara would require multiple separate pool complexes to accommodate their natural pod behavior and the climate difference.
The CITES Secretariat team's inspection of Vantara was prompted by allegations of discrepancies in animal imports from Congo, Mexico, and elsewhere.
Despite Vantara's offer, experts suggest that no single intervention is sufficient to manage the hippo population, and a combination of methods is needed.
Studies show that lakes containing hippos in Colombia showed altered ecosystem metabolism, elevated nutrient loading and phytoplankton communities increasingly dominated by cyanobacteria.
Key Concepts Involved:
Invasive Alien Species: A species introduced outside its normal distribution, threatening native ecosystems.
Capture Myopathy: A condition in wild animals resulting from stress during capture, leading to muscle damage and potential death.
Ecosystem Metabolism: The sum of all biological processes that occur in a particular ecosystem.