The Star Malaysia

Conservati­on push

There are plans for a refuge for pangolins in peril in South Africa.

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JOHANNESBU­RG: Monitored by a conservati­onist, a young pangolin slurped ants with a long tongue near a veterinary hospital that became a temporary home after the animal was found near the body of its mother, killed by a jolt from an electric fence.

The six-month-old scaly anteater foraged on a hillside, building up strength in a tiny step for a global campaign to save one of the world’s most heavily trafficked mammals.

Trafficker­s often sell the pangolin meat locally and ship the scales for use in traditiona­l medicine in Asia, mainly China.

The growing illegal industry has prompted plans in South Africa for a rehabilita­tion centre for sick or rescued pangolins as well as the deployment of sniffer dogs specially trained to detect the scales’ pungent aroma.

Africa’s four species of pangolins are under increasing pressure from poachers because Asia’s four species have been decimated, according to experts.

While commercial trade in all eight species is forbidden, internatio­nal confiscati­ons of African pangolin scales amounted to about 47 tonnes in 2017, more than double the quantity seized in the previous year, said the African Pangolin Working Group, a conservati­on organisati­on based in South Africa.

“The rate of escalation is astounding,” said Eric Ichikowitz, director of a South African foundation.

The Ichikowitz Family Foundation, which has previously trained dogs to detect rhino horn, has funded the training of several dogs that will check for hidden pangolin scales at South African borders, Ichikowitz said.

The foundation has also acquired land near Johannesbu­rg for constructi­on of a “pangaloriu­m” – a research and medical centre for pangolins, including the growing number of live animals seized in sting operations, he said.

Pangolin scales contain keratin, a protein also found in rhino horn and human fingernail­s. There is no scientific proof that they provide any medicinal value.

Conservati­onists say well over one million pangolins have been poached since around 2000; the various kinds range from vulnerable to critically endangered on a list of threatened species.

Eight rescued pangolins have been treated at the Johannesbu­rg Wildlife Veterinary Hospital since last year, though about half died because their health had deteriorat­ed while they were being transporte­d by trafficker­s.

The young pangolin found near the body of its mother was later released into the wild but weakened and died from pneumonia.

“There’s so little known about pangolins – their diseases, their parasites and what affects them – that it’s all a work in progress,” said Nicci Wright, a wildlife rehabilita­tion specialist and a consultant to the African branch of the Humane Society Internatio­nal.

One pangolin that was confiscate­d in Johannesbu­rg after being brought from Zimbabwe had been doused in bleach, apparently to dis- guise its strong natural smell at the border, Wright said.

Another was covered in pig manure for the same reason.

In a different case, Wright said, a rescued pangolin was “absolutely pitch black” because it had been drenched in fuel while being transporte­d by car.

There are currently about 30 pangolin traffickin­g cases in the South African courts, a sharp increase from previous years.

Conservati­onists are encouraged by several jail sentences – the first ever – for pangolin poachers and traders in South Africa starting last year. The punishment­s range from three to seven years in prison. —

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 ?? AP ?? Heavily trafficked: A pangolin being cared for at the Johannesbu­rg Wildlife Veterinary Hospital. —
AP Heavily trafficked: A pangolin being cared for at the Johannesbu­rg Wildlife Veterinary Hospital. —

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