China Daily (Hong Kong)

Pangolins removed from textbooks as TCM ingredient

- By LI WENFANG in Guangzhou liwenfang@chinadaily.com.cn

A primary school science book and a related reference book for teachers will no longer mention pangolins as being a pharmaceut­ical component, after a group questioned the propagatio­n of the belief’s impact on animal conservati­on efforts.

The China Biodiversi­ty Conservati­on and Green Developmen­t Foundation drew attention to the question in a letter to the book’s distributo­r, and the publisher subsequent­ly responded with its own letter to the foundation saying the passages would be removed.

The science book for the first semester of Grade 6 published by Educationa­l Science Publishing House mentioned pangolin parts as an effective ingredient in traditiona­l Chinese medicine, the publishing house noted in its reply to the foundation.

“It is inappropri­ate to list the species as such because pangolins are under national protection,” it said. “After careful checks, we immediatel­y made changes to the textbook and to a related teachers’ reference book.”

It promised that the informatio­n will not appear in books for the upcoming autumn semester.

The foundation sent a letter earlier through its lawyer to Guangdong Xinhua Publishing and Distributi­on Group, the sole distributo­r for the textbook in Guangdong province, after volunteer proofreade­rs spotted the content in a reference book for teachers.

In the book’s section on the value of biodiversi­ty, the word pangolin appears and is indicated as a medicinal component in a diagram.

In the letter to the distributo­r, which was passed to the publisher, the foundation noted that pangolins are protected animals in China, and that their capture, killing and consumptio­n are all prohibited.

Pangolins are on the brink of

extinction worldwide, according to experts.

Because pangolins are falsely believed to have medicinal benefits, they are often consumed outright in China — or used in medicines — the letter said.

“With the progress of society, people’s awareness of animal protection has increased. Textbook content that runs against animal protection efforts needs to be adjusted by the publisher,” said Xiong Bingqi, deputy director of the 21st Century Education Research Institute.

“Textbook compilers need to

know the latest informatio­n in society and update content in a timely manner. Education experts have profession­al knowledge in their fields but don’t have sufficient knowledge in other fields, which leads to defects in textbooks,” Xiong said.

He suggested that animal protection or charity groups be consulted when compiling animal-related sections of textbooks in the future.

Hu Yingxia contribute­d to this story.

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