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September 8, 2009

http://www.scientificamerican.com/article.cfm?id=endangered-species-listing-can-\

make-animals-valuable

 

Endangering Species: Listing Can Make Animals Valuable Black Market Commodities

By certifying species as endangered, government programs can backfire

 

By Wendy Lyons Sunshine<http://www.scientificamerican.com/author.cfm?id=1973>

 

Through most of the last century, Javan hawk

eagles flew unnoticed through the dwindling forests of

Indonesia's principal island of Java. Their prominent head crest and

multi-toned plumage didn't attract attention, bird markets didn't sell them, nor

did zoos have them on display. Then in 1993 the Indonesian government awarded

Javan hawk eagles special protected status. That's when the bird's fortune

turned for the worse.

 

To celebrate the raptor's official " National Rare/Precious Animal "

designation, the Indonesian government printed the Javan hawk eagle's

likeness on postage stamps and phone books. Soon zookeepers and illegal pet

collectors were clamoring for one of their own, and the

birds began popping up for sale in markets around Indonesia. In a study

published earlier this year in *Oryx*, researchers from the University of

Amsterdam's zoological museum concluded that ever since the Indonesian

government officially labeled Javan hawk

eagles as rare and precious, illegal poaching has removed the birds from the

wild at an ever-escalating pace. Over the period from 1975 to 1991, just three

were sighted for sale in Indonesian markets; in recent years 30 to 40 of the

eagles have been spotted in markets annually.

 

The official listing of an animal as endangered can promote poaching, says

Max Abensperg-Traun of the Austrian Ministry of Agriculture and Forestry,

Environment and Water Management, author of a study on this topic that was

published in the May 2009 issue of *Biological Conservation*. It is a matter of

psychology and economics. Perceived

rareness makes animals more appealing to collectors and the increasingly limited

supply pushes their price up on the black market, making illegal trapping and

hunting more lucrative.

Wildlife that once existed under the radar suffers from sudden visibility and

faddish appeal. In an ironic coup de grace, endangered species designation can

sometimes escalate poaching to the point that it wipes out the species it was

intended to protect.

 

View Slide Show*

http://www.scientificamerican.com/slideshow.cfm?id=endangered-species-listing-ca\

n-make-animals-valuable

 

The lure of rarity*

Enthusiasts covet rare animals as exotic pets and hunting trophies as well

as for insect or birds' egg collections. Through mathematical modeling,

French conservation biologists showed in 2006 in *PLoS Biology* how people's

relentless drive to collect rare

animals<http://www.scientificamerican.com/article.cfm?id=extinction-vortex-could\

-r>can

push species to extinction. In the early 1900s, for example, island

development shrank the Indonesian forest habitat of Bali tigers (Panthera

tigris ssp. Balica). Then European trophy hunters pursued the scarce

remaining tigers, and by the 1940s had driven them to extinction. Even

scientists fall prey to the compulsion. Ornithologists and museum

administrators, for example, helped push the great auk (*Pinguinus impennis*)

penguin out of existence in 1844 by fueling demand that pushed prices ever

higher for its skin and eggs.

 

People are attracted by rare

animals<http://www.sciam.com/podcast/episode.cfm?id=rare-designation-may-not-be-\

well-do-09-04-23>and

will go to great lengths to see them, according to research by

ecologists Elena Angulo and Franck Courchamp, published in April 2009 in

PLoS ONE. In the study, when Web visitors were offered the opportunity to

view photos of either endangered Nepalese gharials or common voles online,

they chose rare species most often. Visitors went to more trouble to load

the rare images and waited longer to see them online than did visitors who

selected the common animals.

 

Consumers are hungry for rare animal delicacies, too. White abalone (*Haliotis

sorenseni*), the first federally protected marine invertebrate, now teeters

at just 1 percent of its former population because so many people find it

tasty. In 2008 a federal recovery plan stated that the white abalone " was

driven to such low levels during the height of the commercial fishery that

adults do not occur in high enough densities to successfully reproduce,

contributing to repeated recruitment failure and an effective population

size near zero. " Without urgent and drastic human intervention, " the

approximately 1,600 remaining white abalone in the wild would disappear by

2010. "

 

* " Herp " crazed*

Reptile and amphibian fanciers, nicknamed " herpers " after the academic field

herpetology, are especially avid collectors of animals on the edge. A

published report identifying the Roti Island snake-necked turtle (*Chelodina

mccordi*) in remote Indonesian wetlands was enough to spur a flurry of

illegal trade that drove the newly discovered reptile to the brink of

extinction. Thought to already be extinct, the Philippine forest

turtle (*Siebenrockiella

leytensis*) was rediscovered alive in 2001 and immediately targeted by poachers

and pet

traders<http://www.scientificamerican.com/blog/60-second-science/post.cfm?id=ill\

egal-pet-trade-devastating-popul-2009-05-19>who

sold them on the black market for as much as $2,500 apiece to buyers

in

the U.S., Japan and Europe.

 

At a weekend market in Bangkok, Thailand, undercover researchers from

TRAFFIC, a wildlife trade monitoring network, saw boxes and tanks containing

scarce freshwater turtles such as the radiated tortoise (*Astrochelys

radiata*), which appears on the International Union for Conservation of

Nature (IUCN) Red List of Threatened Species <http://www.iucnredlist.org/>.

Hoping to persuade potential customers, sellers volunteered information

about the tortoises' " Red List " status and offered suggestions about how to

smuggle the animals out of the country.

 

Researchers counted close to 39,000 turtles up for sale over a two-year

period at China's largest pet

bazaar<http://www.scientificamerican.com/article.cfm?id=changing-fortunes-of-chi\

nas-animals>,

the Yuehe Pet Market in Guangzhou, according to a 2009 study published in *

Oryx*. Nearly 20 percent of the world's turtle species were represented,

including 30 species listed as endangered in the Convention on International

Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora (CITES) Appendices I or

II. The study concluded that " the pet trade is a severe threat to turtle

conservation and that law enforcement needs to increase. "

 

*View from undercover*

The illegal pet trade is active in the U.S., as well. Earlier this year the

New York State Department of Environmental Conservation (DEC)

completed " Operation

Shellshock <http://www.dec.ny.gov/press/52868.html>, " a four-year covert

operation targeting illegal herp trading. It culminated in 26 arrests, with

more than 400 animals�including endangered turtles and venomous snakes�taken

into custody as evidence.

 

DEC Lt. Richard Thomas, who went undercover with the state's Environmental

Crimes Investigation team, says he was routinely offered native turtles for

$150 to $2,000 apiece. He witnessed first-hand how endangered status serves

as an illegal marketing tool. " Money is the driving force for most crimes,

including crimes against wildlife, " he says. " Animals listed as endangered

at state and federal levels are highly sought after by markets inside and

outside of the U.S. As a species's status changes under state or federal

legislation, its price goes up, because private collectors want them more

and more. "

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Well that's pretty sick and twisted. Okay, let me add another point to my own

now-4-point animal conservation plan:

1. Arm the bullied animals with high-tech weaponry

2. Train the insurgents in the art of covert ops

3. Teach our children to retreat when fired upon

4. Disguise the identities of all species (for example, make it impossible

to tell a Siebenrockiella leytensis from a Terrapene carolina) using the

latest internet and iPhone technologies

Jigs in Nepal

 

 

 

Wed, 9 Sep 2009 10:45:43 +0530

AAPN List <aapn >

Listing species can make them vulnerable

 

September 8, 2009

http://www.scientificamerican.com/article.cfm?id=endangered-species-listing-can-\

make-animals-valuable

 

Endangering Species: Listing Can Make Animals Valuable Black Market

Commodities

By certifying species as endangered, government programs can backfire

 

By Wendy Lyons

Sunshine<http://www.scientificamerican.com/author.cfm?id=1973>

 

Through most of the last century, Javan hawk

eagles flew unnoticed through the dwindling forests of

Indonesia's principal island of Java. Their prominent head crest and

multi-toned plumage didn't attract attention, bird markets didn't sell them,

nor did zoos have them on display. Then in 1993 the Indonesian government

awarded Javan hawk eagles special protected status. That's when the bird's

fortune turned for the worse.

 

To celebrate the raptor's official " National Rare/Precious Animal "

designation, the Indonesian government printed the Javan hawk eagle's

likeness on postage stamps and phone books. Soon zookeepers and illegal pet

collectors were clamoring for one of their own, and the

birds began popping up for sale in markets around Indonesia. In a study

published earlier this year in *Oryx*, researchers from the University of

Amsterdam's zoological museum concluded that ever since the Indonesian

government officially labeled Javan hawk

eagles as rare and precious, illegal poaching has removed the birds from the

wild at an ever-escalating pace. Over the period from 1975 to 1991, just

three were sighted for sale in Indonesian markets; in recent years 30 to 40

of the eagles have been spotted in markets annually.

 

The official listing of an animal as endangered can promote poaching, says

Max Abensperg-Traun of the Austrian Ministry of Agriculture and Forestry,

Environment and Water Management, author of a study on this topic that was

published in the May 2009 issue of *Biological Conservation*. It is a matter

of psychology and economics. Perceived

rareness makes animals more appealing to collectors and the increasingly

limited supply pushes their price up on the black market, making illegal

trapping and hunting more lucrative.

Wildlife that once existed under the radar suffers from sudden visibility

and faddish appeal. In an ironic coup de grace, endangered species

designation can sometimes escalate poaching to the point that it wipes out

the species it was intended to protect.

 

View Slide Show*

http://www.scientificamerican.com/slideshow.cfm?id=endangered-species-listing-ca\

n-make-animals-valuable

 

The lure of rarity*

Enthusiasts covet rare animals as exotic pets and hunting trophies as well

as for insect or birds' egg collections. Through mathematical modeling,

French conservation biologists showed in 2006 in *PLoS Biology* how people's

relentless drive to collect rare

animals<http://www.scientificamerican.com/article.cfm?id=extinction-vortex-c

ould-r>can

push species to extinction. In the early 1900s, for example, island

development shrank the Indonesian forest habitat of Bali tigers (Panthera

tigris ssp. Balica). Then European trophy hunters pursued the scarce

remaining tigers, and by the 1940s had driven them to extinction. Even

scientists fall prey to the compulsion. Ornithologists and museum

administrators, for example, helped push the great auk (*Pinguinus

impennis*)

penguin out of existence in 1844 by fueling demand that pushed prices ever

higher for its skin and eggs.

 

People are attracted by rare

animals<http://www.sciam.com/podcast/episode.cfm?id=rare-designation-may-not

-be-well-do-09-04-23>and

will go to great lengths to see them, according to research by

ecologists Elena Angulo and Franck Courchamp, published in April 2009 in

PLoS ONE. In the study, when Web visitors were offered the opportunity to

view photos of either endangered Nepalese gharials or common voles online,

they chose rare species most often. Visitors went to more trouble to load

the rare images and waited longer to see them online than did visitors who

selected the common animals.

 

Consumers are hungry for rare animal delicacies, too. White abalone

(*Haliotis

sorenseni*), the first federally protected marine invertebrate, now teeters

at just 1 percent of its former population because so many people find it

tasty. In 2008 a federal recovery plan stated that the white abalone " was

driven to such low levels during the height of the commercial fishery that

adults do not occur in high enough densities to successfully reproduce,

contributing to repeated recruitment failure and an effective population

size near zero. " Without urgent and drastic human intervention, " the

approximately 1,600 remaining white abalone in the wild would disappear by

2010. "

 

* " Herp " crazed*

Reptile and amphibian fanciers, nicknamed " herpers " after the academic field

herpetology, are especially avid collectors of animals on the edge. A

published report identifying the Roti Island snake-necked turtle (*Chelodina

mccordi*) in remote Indonesian wetlands was enough to spur a flurry of

illegal trade that drove the newly discovered reptile to the brink of

extinction. Thought to already be extinct, the Philippine forest

turtle (*Siebenrockiella

leytensis*) was rediscovered alive in 2001 and immediately targeted by

poachers

and pet

traders<http://www.scientificamerican.com/blog/60-second-science/post.cfm?id

=illegal-pet-trade-devastating-popul-2009-05-19>who

sold them on the black market for as much as $2,500 apiece to buyers

in

the U.S., Japan and Europe.

 

At a weekend market in Bangkok, Thailand, undercover researchers from

TRAFFIC, a wildlife trade monitoring network, saw boxes and tanks containing

scarce freshwater turtles such as the radiated tortoise (*Astrochelys

radiata*), which appears on the International Union for Conservation of

Nature (IUCN) Red List of Threatened Species <http://www.iucnredlist.org/>.

Hoping to persuade potential customers, sellers volunteered information

about the tortoises' " Red List " status and offered suggestions about how to

smuggle the animals out of the country.

 

Researchers counted close to 39,000 turtles up for sale over a two-year

period at China's largest pet

bazaar<http://www.scientificamerican.com/article.cfm?id=changing-fortunes-of

-chinas-animals>,

the Yuehe Pet Market in Guangzhou, according to a 2009 study published in *

Oryx*. Nearly 20 percent of the world's turtle species were represented,

including 30 species listed as endangered in the Convention on International

Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora (CITES) Appendices I or

II. The study concluded that " the pet trade is a severe threat to turtle

conservation and that law enforcement needs to increase. "

 

*View from undercover*

The illegal pet trade is active in the U.S., as well. Earlier this year the

New York State Department of Environmental Conservation (DEC)

completed " Operation

Shellshock <http://www.dec.ny.gov/press/52868.html>, " a four-year covert

operation targeting illegal herp trading. It culminated in 26 arrests, with

more than 400 animals�including endangered turtles and venomous

snakes�taken

into custody as evidence.

 

DEC Lt. Richard Thomas, who went undercover with the state's Environmental

Crimes Investigation team, says he was routinely offered native turtles for

$150 to $2,000 apiece. He witnessed first-hand how endangered status serves

as an illegal marketing tool. " Money is the driving force for most crimes,

including crimes against wildlife, " he says. " Animals listed as endangered

at state and federal levels are highly sought after by markets inside and

outside of the U.S. As a species's status changes under state or federal

legislation, its price goes up, because private collectors want them more

and more. "

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