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New postage stamp on endangoured animals

Five endangered species are printed on the new stamps.

The SA Post Office (SAPO) recently issued a set of stamps featuring six endangered South African animals.

According to the acting group chief executive officer of SAPO, Mlu Mathonsi, a total of 50 000 stamps sheets will draw attention to the plight of the oribi, black rhino, grey crowned crane, ground hornbill, sungazer and Cape parrot.

In a media statement received from SAPO it states “the post office is doing more than raise awareness”.

The Endangered Wildlife Trust has been engaged to train staff at South Africa’s international mail centres so that x-ray machine operators know how to identify animals and animal parts in parcels to foreign countries.

Mathonsi says the contents of all outgoing international mail items are checked by means of x-ray machines.

The artwork of the stamps was done by wildlife artist Alan Ainslie.

The stamps cost R3 each, a set of six costs R18 and the first-day cover R21.

The items are available at most post offices or at www.virtualpostoffice.co.za.

“The animals depicted on the six stamps were selected by the Endangered Wildlife Trust, an organisation founded in 1973, with the purpose of protecting South Africa’s threatened wildlife species,” he says.

History

The sungazer, largest of the girdled lizards, is found only in South Africa’s north eastern Free State as well as south western Mpumalanga.

They reproduce only every other year, producing only one or two offspring.

The cultivation of their native grasslands, illegal collecting for the pet trade and muti (traditional medicine) industry has brought their numbers into decline.

Black rhinos occur only in Africa and their numbers have been under great pressure as a result of illegal trade in rhino horn.

Between 1960 and 1995, large-scale poaching caused a 98% collapse in their numbers.

The oribi, a gracious little antelope, occurs along the eastern parts of Mpumalanga, KwaZulu-Natal and the Eastern Cape.

Trapped in snares and persecuted by hunters with dogs, the oribi is also losing its habitat to forestry, farming, and mining.

The elegant grey crowned crane graces many of Africa’s wetlands.

Threats to their populations include illegal capture for the pet trade and the loss or degradation of suitable wetland habitat.

The imposing ground hornbill, largest of the hornbill family, is under threat through illegal hunting for traditional medicine, the bush-meat trade and habitat destruction due to human development.

The Cape parrot is South Africa’s only endemic parrot species and is found in the fragmented southern mist belt forests.

Over the past 150 years, illegal capture for the wild-caught bird trade has reduced the numbers of the global wild population to less than 1 600 individuals.

The commemorative envelope features a bearded vulture.

Listed as critically endangered, there is estimated to be only 100 breeding pairs and a total population of about 300 birds left in the wild.

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