Beef export drive raises conservation issue in Zimbabwe
Two fundamental principles of conservation the proper use of
marginal lands and the use of buffer zones around protected wildlife areas - are
at stake in a controversy surrounding efforts by Zimbabwe's Government and
livestock industry to comply with import regulations governing access to the
European Community's lucrative market for beef.
The more immediate debate has centred on the slaughter of about
1.000 of Zimbabwe's wild buffalo (Synverus caffer), which have been implicated
in all but one of 32 out-breaks of foot-and-mouth disease (FMD) in the country
during the last 25 years. EEC veterinary regulations prescribe that all regions
of an exporting country must be free of the disease for at least 12 months
before exports of beef to community members can begin. Moreover, cattle in the
major beef-producing areas must be totally isolated from any possible contact
with buffalo.
Although buffalo, and most other large indigenous mammals, have
long-since withdrawn from the central Zimbabwean plateau, which will provide
most of the beef for export, some buffalo remain outside the national park areas
of Hwange in the west and Gonarezhou in the south and are regarded as a
potential source of infection, even through located well away from beef
producing areas. Accordingly, Hwage and Gonarezhou have sealed off with game
fences. Outside each park a vaccination zone has been established within which
all cattle will be compulsorily vaccinated against FMD and all buffalo will be
slaughtered. Buffalo will also be slaughtered within an additional buffer zone
beyond the vaccination zone. (See adjoining map.)
For Zimbabwe's beef industry, plagued with low domestic prices,
the prospective EEC contract of 8.100 tons annually could provide much needed
impetus. For the country as a whole it represents, at present prices, $60
million annually in desperately needed foreign exchange. But wild buffalo have
also been bringing in foreign exchange by attracting lucrative hunting safaris
to the former tribal areas where they roamed and to a number of established game
ranches. It is estimated that the removal of buffalo could reduce these earnings
by half.
The International Union for the Conservation of Nature and
Natural Resources (IUCN), which has taken a particular interest in the case,
points out that the slaughter of 1 000 buffalo is not in itself the most serious
aspect of the matter. Far greater numbers are reported to have died during the
recent prolonged drought without noticeable impact on the overall buffalo
population, estimated to total about 50 000. On the other hand, the IUCN points
out that almost all the land inside the buffalo eradication zone is marginal,
with erratic rainfall and poor soils. It is ideally suited to indigenous
wildlife, but very little else Some ecologists argue that a wide range of
herbivores are needed to utilize available vegetation efficiently and
accordingly advocate multi-species game ranching. Thus, elimination of the
buffalo from this region is seen as negating sound conservation principles that
have been developed with great care over many years.
A second concern noted by IUCN is that the new game fences
around Hwange and Gonarezhou parks and the elimination of buffalo outside these
fences demolishes the long-cherished dream of establishing buffer zones of
gradually decreasing conservation status around major- wildlife areas. In the
view of many ecologists the new arrangement is "too sharp-edged".
There remains a possibility that the cleared zones may
eventually be restocked with FMD-free buffalo. Dr John Condy, a leading Zimbabwe
veterinarian, has been developing a herd of buffalo calves caught before they
were old enough to become carriers of FMD viruses. The Department of National
Parks is also considering a capture exercise to increase its own FMD-free herd.
The EEC may help to fund the development of this herd, currently at about 100
head, but release of these animals into the cleared zones is not expected for
several years and would, in any case, depend on the opinion of the EEC
veterinary committee.
Some critics are linking the situation in Zimbabwe to that in
Botswana which has been exporting beef to Europe for- a number of years.
Although there was no deliberate eradication programme in Botswana, the game
fences established there to protect domestic livestock from FMD are said to have
had a serious effect on migratory wildlife, especially wildebeest. NOW, a new
fence being planned by the Botswana Ministry of Agriculture is causing concern
in both countries. It would run northwest along the boundary of Hwange National
Park, which coincides with the international border, then west for a short
distance before turning southwest and finally south past the Nxai Pan National
Park. Such a fence, says IUCN, would halt the present movement of large mammals
to salt pans and water sources located south of the fence line, and would also
complete the near- encapsulation of Hwange National Park. The real principle at
stake, according to IUCN, is the proper use of marginal lands suited to
indigenous
wildlife.