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Post Info TOPIC: Pet trade's greed is emptying SEA Forests
2010

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Pet trade's greed is emptying SEA Forests
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Monkeys, butterflies, turtles… how the pet trade's greed is emptying
south-east Asia's forests

Whole species disappear from the wild as millions of animals are
illegally exported round the world in a business with profit margins
that rival the drugs trade

The Observer (UK), Sunday 21 February 2010

Countries across south-east Asia are being systematically drained of
wildlife to meet a booming demand for exotic pets in Europe and Japan
and traditional medicine in China – posing a greater threat to many
species than habitat loss or global warming.

More than 35 million animals were legally exported from the region
over the past decade, official figures show, and hundreds of millions
more could have been taken illegally. Almost half of those traded were
seahorses and more than 17 million were reptiles. About 1 million
birds and 400,000 mammals were traded, along with 18 million pieces of
coral.

The situation is so serious that experts have invented a new term –
empty forest syndrome – to describe the gaping holes in biodiversity
left behind.

"There's lots of forest where there are just no big animals left,"
says Chris Shepherd of Traffic, the wildlife trade monitoring network.
"There are some forests where you don't even hear birds."

Seahorses, butterflies, turtles, lizards, snakes, macaques, birds and
corals are among the most common species exported from countries such
as Malaysia, Indonesia and Vietnam. Much of the business is controlled
by criminal gangs, Shepherd says, and many of the animals end up in
Europe as pets. The rarer the species, the greater the demand and the
higher the price. Collectors will happily pay several thousand pounds
for a single live turtle.

Vincent Nijman, a researcher at Oxford Brookes University who has
investigated the trade, said: "We see species that are in fashion
traded in great numbers until they are wiped out and people can't get
them any more. So another one comes in, and then that is wiped out,
and then another comes in."

He added: "In Asia, everybody knows the value of wildlife, so people
go into the forest and, whatever they encounter, they know it has a
value and that there is someone they can sell it to."

Nijman's research offers the first glimpse of the size of this
widespread trade. While most people are aware of illegal sales of
rhino horn and ivory, he says it is the scale of the movement of
lesser-known species that is most disturbing.

He analysed 53,000 records of imports and exports from countries under
Cites, the international convention that regulates the sale of
wildlife. Most common species are not listed under Cites, so do not
appear in the records. Trade in the most endangered, such as rhino and
tiger, is banned. Nijman looked at species considered vulnerable
enough that trade is allowed, but controlled. "I'm not against the
wildlife trade at all. I think it is a very important economic driver
for a large part of the region and a lot of people are dependent on
it," he said. "But it has to be done in such a way that you don't
finish it all this year. It's not like oil, where you drill it out and
then it's gone. If you organise and regulate it properly, it should go
on for ever."

Cites records between 1998 and 2007 showed that of more than 35
million animals exported during that period, some 30 million were
taken from the wild. The EU and Japan were among the most significant
importers.

For some mammal species, the proportion sourced from the wild dropped
significantly over the decade, and traders were forced to rely
increasingly on captive-bred animals. Official trade in birds
virtually disappeared by 2007, probably because of bird flu
restrictions.

The bulk of seahorses traded were in the form of dried specimens for
Chinese medicine. "The moment you look into the wildlife trade in
south-east Asia, China is the biggest challenge, because they can use
everything and they will use everything."

Trade in the Asian pangolin, a scaly anteater, illustrates the
problem. Officially, countries do not allow their commercial sale and
agreed a zero quota under Cites in 2000, though regular seizures show
widespread trade, for medicine and meat. "The countries closest to
China get emptied [of pangolin] first. Vietnam and Laos have been
drained. Myanmar has been drained and they are working south, so now
Indonesia is being emptied of pangolins," Shepherd says. "Prices are
very high and in the next few years we will see pangolins being sucked
out of Africa to supply the demand."

Nijman says his analysis of the Cites records, published in the
journal Biodiversity and Conservation, inevitably underestimates the
scale of the trade. "There is always an unknown quantity of Cites-
listed species that are traded without being reported, and on top of
that, probably much larger, is the trade in non-Cites species, which
are the species that we think are still common enough to be traded
without controls."

One of these is the tokay gecko. "Every­one who has been to Indonesia
or Malaysia will know them because they are the ones that sit in your
hotel room. You have them everywhere." Although not listed by Cites,
Indonesia has set a limit of 45,000 of the lizards exported each year
as pets. Nijman says the true number traded is much higher, perhaps
into the millions. "We can't say whether a million tokay geckos being
traded a year, or two million, is too many. Perhaps there are so many
it is OK. But you would think that if they set the quota at 45,000
then a million is too much."

Such geckos can be typically bought in rural villages for a few cents
each, and sold for $10 – a profit margin that rivals the drugs trade.
"It's a great business. No wonder organised crime gets involved and
starts running things," Shepherd says. "In Malaysia if you get caught
selling drugs you get the death penalty. For wildlife crime the
maximum fine is about $5,000."

The situation is acute in south-east Asia, but the trade, both legal
and illegal, is global, often using the internet and courier delivery.
For $4,000, an illegal trader based in Indonesia will send a three-
year-old ploughshare tortoise from Madagascar, one of the most
endangered animals in the world.

Other species sell for as much as $20,000, though Nijman and Shepherd
do not want to advertise which ones. "People do know about the rhinos
and the tigers, but the vast majority of this trade is in stuff that
they didn't know existed," said Shepherd. "A handful of people are
getting very rich and most people are getting screwed out of their
natural resources."

THE WILDLIFE MARKET

130,000 butterflies, mostly from Malaysia to US, EU and Canada (such
as the Birdwing)

16 million seahorses, mostly from Thailand to Hong Kong, Taiwan and
China

73,000 exotic fish, mostly from Malaysia and Indonesia to Hong Kong
(such as the Napoleon Wrasse)

17 million reptiles, mostly from Indonesia and Malaysia, to Singapore,
EU and Japan; includes 1.3 million softshell turtles, 1.8 million
cobras, 8.1 million monitor lizards, 400,000 crocodiles

400,000 mammals, mostly from China and Malaysia to the EU and
Singapore; includes 270,000 macaques, 91,000 leopard cats

1 million birds, mainly from China, Vietnam and Malaysia, to the EU,
Japan and Malaysia (such as leiothrix babblers)

18 million pieces of coral and 2,000 tonnes of live coral, mainly from
Indonesia to the US and EU

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