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PI Cognitive Assessment FREE PI Cognitive Verbal Reasoning Assessment Questions and Answers

Despite requests from Tanzania and Zambia to repeal the restriction, the United Nations Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species (CITIES) has upheld a ban on trading ivory since 1989.
Compared to the 1.3 million elephants present in Africa in 1979, only 470,000 remain now.

Although poaching for ivory was a major contributing factor in declining elephant populations, natural habitat degradation was still a problem.

Elephant numbers have decreased since the ban's implementation, with poaching for ivory being the main factor.

Although many African nations' elephant populations have rebounded since the ban's implementation, an estimated 38,000 elephants are still killed each year, according to estimates.

In 1999 and 2008, CITIES allowed one-time sales, enabling authorized nations to get rid of their ivory government stockpiles.

Since carved ivory is in high demand in China and Japan, ivory from these sales was exported to those countries.

Because so much of the ivory traded has an unidentified provenance, conservation groups adamantly oppose additional one-time sales.

The sales have also increased the demand for ivory in the far east.

Poaching continues to be a way of life in nations in central and western Africa where organized crime rings run profitable ivory smuggling activities.

Those who favor allowing one-time sales contend that elephants are no longer in danger and that keeping the ban in place will just drive up the price of illegal ivory and increase the allure of poaching.

Even while the CITIES ruling is celebrated by conservationists, the future of African elephants depends on the government's commitment to upholding the prohibition.

Question: No legal sales of Ivory have occurred since 1989.

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