Deadly Traffic
Transcription
Deadly Traffic
Deadly Traffic BY JENNIFER WEEKS 28 SMITHSONIAN Zoogoer | SUMMER 2015 Illegal trade in wildlife is pushing many species to the brink of extinction. A M A ND A PERE Z arlier this spring, President Uhuru Kenyatta of Kenya marked World Wildlife Day in an unusual way: He set fifteen tons of ivory on fire at Nairobi National Park. Kenyatta’s bonfire was a message for poachers who kill thousands of African elephants illegally every year for their ivory tusks. Although international commerce in ivory has been banned since 1989, it is widely traded on a thriving black market for up to $1,000 per pound. By burning ivory confiscated from poachers, Kenyatta signaled that his government would not tolerate this deadly trade. According to one recent study, ivory poachers killed approximately 100,000 African elephants from 2011 through 2013 out of a total wild population of roughly 500,000. Many conservationists fear that African elephants could be driven to extinction within several decades if the slaughter is not curbed. And elephants are not alone. International wildlife trafficking is a global trade estimated to be worth up to $20 billion annually. It is the fourth-largest illegal business in the world, exceeded only by drug sales, the arms trade, and human trafficking. “Wildlife trafficking is an urgent, near-term crisis,” says Peter LaFontaine, a campaign officer with the International Fund for Animal Welfare (IFAW). “Poaching is at record levels. Iconic species like tigers and elephants are being pushed to the edge, and many lesser-known animals are also at risk.” That includes numerous species found at the Smithsonian’s National Zoo. In 2014, the Obama administration released a national strategy to curb wildlife smuggling at home and abroad. There is also work to be done raising public awareness. The United States is the second-largest market in the world for animals and animal products, after China. “Wildlife trafficking isn’t just something that happens in other countries. It’s also an American story,” says Cheryl Braunstein, the Zoo’s manager of exhibit planning and development. (See The Elephant in the Room, page 34, for information about a new exhibit at the Zoo on wildlife trafficking.) “We want our visitors to understand that they can be part of the solution.” Regulating the Wildlife Trade Humans have traded in animals and animal products for centuries—often with severe impacts on prized species. As an example, many explorers journeyed to North America starting in the 16th century to hunt for furs, which were in high demand in Europe and Russia. THE MAGAZINE FOR MEMBERS OF FONZ | FRIENDS OF THE NATIONAL ZOO 29 Deadly Traffic “Wildlife trafficking isn’t just something that happens in other countries. It’s also an American story.” By the mid-1800s fur traders had hunted and trapped beavers to near-extinction across the continent and virtually eliminated sea otters along the California coast. Conservationists started sounding an alarm in the 1960s, calling for limits on global trade in animal products to protect species that were being over-exploited. Their warnings led to the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Flora and Fauna, known as CITES (pronounced SITE-eez), which was signed by 80 countries in 1973 in Washington, D.C., and took effect in 1975. Today 175 countries have joined CITES, which protects about 5,600 species of animals and 30,000 plant species. These organisms are listed on three appendices. For species on Appendix I— those threatened with extinction (including gorillas, tigers, African elephants, and giant pandas)—trade is banned except for rare cases, such as scientific research. Appendix II species, such as green iguanas and American black bears, may be threatened if traded, so trade in these species is regulated. Appendix III species are not threatened yet, but at least one CITES member country has asked for help regulating their trade. For example, the United States has listed several species of freshwater turtles on Appendix III. CITES member countries can only import or export listed species (even from non-CITES countries) if the transactions are approved through a licensing system. Each member country is required to pass its own laws regulating trade in listed species. In the United States, CITES is implemented through the Endangered Species Act and enforced by the U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service (USFWS). “CITES sets the norms for international wildlife trade, and its decisions are binding on member countries,” says Marshall Jones, senior conservation advisor at the Smithsonian Conservation Biology Institute in Front Royal, Virginia (SCBI). Jones worked at USFWS for more than 30 years, including seven years overseeing U.S. enforcement of CITES as the agency’s deputy director. But CITES is only as strong as its member states, Jones notes. “Some nations don’t have enough training and resources to police their wildlife trade effectively,” he says. “And in corrupt governments, people may wink at illegal transactions or even make money from them.” MEHGA N MURP HY/NZP Broad Demand Customers around the world pay high prices for rare animals and animal products. Asia is a major demand center, especially China, where incomes are rising. Many newly prosperous Asian consumers covet luxury goods like tiger skins, ivory carvings, and other objects that convey status. Traditional Chinese medicine, practiced across 30 SMITHSONIAN Zoogoer | SUMMER 2015 the region as well as in the United States, is also an important driver of wildlife smuggling. Numerous animal parts, including rhinoceros horns, deer musk, and bile from the gall bladders of black bears, are widely used in traditional Chinese remedies. Some of these products have no medicinal value: rhino horns, for instance, are simply masses of compacted hair. Others, such as bear bile, may have some medicinal effects, although the scientific evidence is inconclusive. “Drug companies are working to develop synthetic versions of bear bile, but it will take time to convince people to switch,” says Jones. U.S. and European consumers also buy luxury goods made from illicit animal products, such as shoes and bags made from python and crocodile skins. In response to pressure from animal welfare groups, some leading designers and retail chains have pledged not to use animal skins in their products. But other companies advertise products made from rare animals, which can sell for thousands of dollars. “The vast majority of animal products used in the western fashion industry are from legal sources, but there also is illegal trade.” says Jones. “Fish and Wildlife Service agents spend a lot of time inspecting gigantic shipments of things like shoes coming in from other countries to make sure they don’t have illegal products mixed in. It’s very time-consuming and takes expertise to spot illicit items mixed in with legal ones.” The exotic pet trade also generates heavy demand for endangered species. Customs officials around the world have LEFT: Overhunting has reduced the wild population of Eld’s deer—native to southeast Asia—to dangerously low levels throughout their range. FACING PAGE: Gorillas and other primates are often hunted for bushmeat. PREVIOUS PAGE: Like their larger African relatives, Asian elephants are hunted for their ivory, which remains in high demand on the illegal wildlife trafficking market. MEHGAN MURPHY/NZP THE MAGAZINE FOR MEMBERS OF FONZ | FRIENDS OF THE NATIONAL ZOO 31 Deadly Traffic Iconic species like tigers and elephants are being pushed to the edge, and many lesser-known animals are also at risk. in the African bushmeat trade. In Asia many species of deer are over-hunted. One example is Eld’s deer, a graceful mediumsize species that scientists at SCBI have been studying for a decade. “Eld’s deer used to be found all through Southeast Asia, but now they are down to fewer than 100 in Cambodia and maybe 50 in Laos,” says William McShea, a senior scientist at SCBI. “We think of deer as overabundant, but that’s only true in Europe and North America. There are 65odd species around the world, and most of them don’t have effective protection. People hunt them for meat and use their antlers and musk glands in traditional medicine.” Stemming the Tide U.S. leaders see the illicit wildlife trade both as a threat to conservation and to international security. Increasingly sophisticated smuggling networks are “perpetuating corruption and border insecurity, particularly in key eastern, central and southern African States,” the Obama administration’s anti-trafficking strategy asserts. Armed militant groups, including Boko Haram in Nigeria and the Janjaweed in Sudan, are funding their operations through elephant poaching. In other regions wildlife traffickers have worked with organized crime groups such as the Russian Mafia to move black-market animal products across borders. Wildlife trafficking also undercuts development in many lowincome countries by fostering corruption, weakening local law enforcement agencies and harming species such as elephants that are important tourist draws. CO N N O R M A LL ON/NZP caught smugglers trying to sneak live tropical birds, snakes, lizards, monkeys, juvenile leopards and panthers, and many other species through international airports. Animals may be drugged and packed in luggage or hidden in the smugglers’ clothes. “We constantly hear about reptile trafficking. Sometimes USFWS asks us to take confiscated animals,” says Matt Evans, a biologist at the Zoo who works with reptiles and amphibians. “Tortoises from Madagascar and turtles from Asia are collected for food and for the pet industry. Dealers can get thousands of dollars for one animal.” At the Zoo, visitors can see radiated and spider tortoises, two species from Madagascar that are critically endangered due to trafficking and other threats. Many other species also are hunted and sold for food. In Africa, wild animals killed as food are referred to as bushmeat. Great apes, crocodiles, fruit bats, pangolins, and numerous other species are sold 32 SMITHSONIAN Zoogoer | SUMMER 2015 The new U.S. strategy directs agencies—including the State and Defense Departments—to work with USFWS on anti-trafficking initiatives. It also seeks to reduce demand for illegally traded wildlife through public education and outreach to sectors where these goods are traded, such as the travel and pet industries and Internet marketplaces. And it calls for stepped-up diplomacy and partnerships to help other governments fight poaching and trafficking. Smithsonian conservation experts provided advice to federal agencies as the plan was developed, and will continue to consult with the executive branch as it is put into action. “It’s a coordinated effort across the U.S. government,” says Jones. “But there’s not a lot of new funding available in today’s tight fiscal climate, so agencies will have to work creatively to find new resources and partners.” That includes U.S. zoos, which are ideally positioned to educate visitors about wildlife trafficking. “Many people don’t realize that ivory comes from a dead elephant, or that reptile skin in fashion goods comes from animals,” says IFAW’s LaFontaine. And most zoogoers will probably be surprised to learn how many species of all kinds are affected by the black-market animal trade. “I don’t think many Americans know how many exotic birds are seriously threatened,” says Sara Hallager, the Zoo’s bird curator. “One of the rarest birds in our collection is the blue-billed curassow, which is critically endangered—there are only about 250 of them left. They live in the mountains in northern Colombia, and are hunted for food.” Some endangered birds’ feathers are prized for costumes and other uses. Many zoos collect naturally molted feathers from prized species and send them to repositories that distribute the feathers MEHGAN MURPHY/NZP to indigenous communities and other users. The National Zoo helped launch a program that distributes naturally molted feathers from kori bustards, which are popular for use in fly fishing lures. Kori bustards are listed on Appendix II of CITES, partly due to over-hunting. “A large flight feather from a kori bustard can sell for $500. We’ve flooded the market with naturally molted feathers, thereby reducing the need for fly makers to go shoot birds in Africa,” says Hallager. Buyer Beware Zoogoers can help curb the deadly trade in endangered wildlife. The most important step, experts say, is to avoid buying animal products without evidence that the items do not come from endangered species. That holds true for purchases in the United States and even more so when traveling abroad. “You may see an interesting carving or garment in a local market in the Caribbean or Africa, but if the seller can’t explain where it came from, don’t buy it,” says LaFontaine. ABOVE: Radiated tortoises are critically endangered in their native Madagascar, where collection for the pet trade and food has sent the species’ population spiraling downward in recent decades. FACING PAGE: Beavers were nearly hunted to extinction in the 1800s. The species has since recovered across North America. THE MAGAZINE FOR MEMBERS OF FONZ | FRIENDS OF THE NATIONAL ZOO 33 Deadly Traffic The blue-billed curassow is critically endangered— there are only about 250 of them left. Similarly, do not buy exotic pets, especially if the dealer cannot document their origin or show they were legally imported or bred in capacity. The exotic pet trade harms animals in multiple ways. Many endangered species that are imported illegally for sale as pets die in transit. And if non-native species escape or are released in the United States, they can become invasive and disrupt local ecosystems. One prominent example is the Burmese python, which can grow as long as 20 feet and is listed on CITES Appendix II. Burmese pythons imported by pet dealers have become established in the Florida Everglades, where they prey on native mammals and birds. To help protect animals directly, consumers can buy Save Vanishing Species stamps at U.S. post offices. Eleven cents from each stamp purchased goes to USFWS’s Multinational Species Conservation Funds, which help partner groups around the world conserve and manage threatened species including elephants, great apes, tigers, rhinos, and sea turtles. This program has raised more than $2.6 million since its start in 2011. Reducing global wildlife trafficking is a long-term challenge, Marshall Jones acknowledges. “This issue has to be an integral part of U.S. foreign policy and conservation policy for the indefinite future,” he says. But Jones sees progress occurring, especially in developing countries. “These animals are resources for many countries, and part of their birthrights,” he says. “As societies evolve, they start thinking about these bigger issues and realizing that they have to take action before it’s too late.” — JENNIFER WEEKS is a freelance journalist in Massachusetts who writes about environment, science, and health. The Elephant in the Room A M A ND A PERE Z This spring, visitors will notice a new exhibit at the Smithsonian’s National Zoo: a six-foot-long kiosk bearing the image of an African elephant. It’s the centerpiece of a new public education campaign the Zoo is launching to educate visitors about wildlife trafficking. Although the Zoo does not exhibit African elephants, illegal wildlife trade also threatens Asian elephants and many other species in the Zoo’s collections. The display will provide information about widespread illegal trafficking of numerous species of mammals, birds, reptiles, amphibians, and fishes, including many rare and endangered species. It will move from site to site at the Zoo, with new information at each location about the animals that can be seen nearby. By moving the exhibit periodically, the Zoo’s wildlife trafficking team aims to educate as many visitors as possible about the broad impact of the illegal wildlife trade. “We have never used the Zoo’s collection in such a broad and encompassing way,” says Cheryl Braunstein, manager of exhibit planning and development at the National Zoo. “Almost every collection at the Zoo is affected by wildlife trafficking. We want visitors to understand what’s happening to these animals around the world, and what they can do about it.” To reach wider audiences, FONZ’s education team is producing videos, curriculum materials, and training manuals for schools. The Zoo will also use social media to publicize littleknown facts about wildlife trafficking and the U.S. role as a major importer of trafficked products. “Once people understand where these goods come from, they can stop buying them at home or as souvenirs when they travel,” says Braunstein. A duplicate kiosk can also be seen at the National Air and Space Museum through this summer and may travel to other Smithsonian museums in the future. Learn more: fonz.org/traffickingexhibit 34 SMITHSONIAN Zoogoer | SUMMER 2015 JESSIE COHEN/NZP Hunting and egg collection have contributed to the decline of blue-billed curassows, which are critically endangered throughout their range in northern Colombia. THE MAGAZINE FOR MEMBERS OF FONZ | FRIENDS OF THE NATIONAL ZOO 35