Houston Chronicle Sunday

Hunted species championed at conference

- By Kathia Martínez

PANAMA CITY — An internatio­nal wildlife conference moved to enact some of the most significan­t protection for shark species targeted in the fin trade and scores of turtles, lizards and frogs whose numbers are being decimated by the pet trade.

The Convention on Internatio­nal Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora, known by its initials as CITES, ended Friday in Panama. Along with protection­s for over 500 species, delegates at the United Nations wildlife conference rejected a proposal to reopen the ivory trade. An ivory ban was enacted in 1989.

“Good news from CITES is good news for wildlife as this treaty is one of the pillars of internatio­nal conservati­on, imperative at ensuring countries unite at combatting the global interrelat­ed crises of biodiversi­ty collapse, climate change, and pandemics,” said Susan Lieberman, the vice president of internatio­nal policy at Wildlife Conservati­on Society.

“Many of the proposals adopted here reflect there is ongoing over-exploitati­on and unsustaina­ble trade, and escalating illegal trade, and some are due to complex interactio­ns of other threats reducing species population­s in the wild, including climate change, disease, infrastruc­ture

developmen­t, and habitat loss,” she added.

The internatio­nal wildlife trade treaty, which was adopted 49 years ago in Washington, D.C., has been praised for helping stem the illegal and unsustaina­ble trade in ivory and rhino horns as well as in whales and sea turtles.

But it has come under fire for its limitation­s, including its reliance on cash-strapped developing countries to combat illegal trade that’s become a lucrative $10 billion-a-year business.

One of the biggest achievemen­t this year was increasing or providing protection for more than 90 shark species, including

54 species of requiem sharks, the bonnethead shark, three species of hammerhead shark and 37 species of guitarfish. Many had never before had trade protection and now, under Appendix II, the commercial trade will be regulated.

Global shark population­s are declining, with annual deaths due to fisheries reaching about 100 million. The sharks are sought mostly for their fins, which are used in shark fin soup, a popular delicacy in China and elsewhere in Asia.

“These species are threatened by the unsustaina­ble and unregulate­d fisheries that supply the internatio­nal trade in their meat

and fins, which has driven extensive population declines,” Rebecca Regnery, senior director for wildlife at Humane Society Internatio­nal, said in a statement. “With Appendix II listing, CITES Parties can allow trade only if it is not detrimenta­l to the survival of the species in the wild, giving these species help they need to recover from overexploi­tation.”

The conference also enacted protection­s for dozens of species of turtle, lizard and frogs including glass frogs whose translucen­t skin made them a favorite in the pet trade. Several species of song birds also got trade protection.

“Already under immense ecological pressure resulting from habitat loss, climate change and disease, the unmanaged and growing trade in glass frogs is exacerbati­ng the already existing threats to the species,” Danielle Kessler, the U.S. country director for the Internatio­nal Fund for Animal Welfare, said in a statement. “This trade must be regulated and limited to sustainabl­e levels to avoid compoundin­g the multiple threats they already face.”

But some of the more controvers­ial proposals weren’t approved.

Some African countries and conservati­on groups had hoped to ban the trade in hippos. But it was opposed by the European Union, some African countries and several conservati­on groups, who argue many countries have healthy hippo population­s and that trade isn’t a factor in their decline.

“Globally cherished mammals such as rhinos, hippos, elephants and leopards didn’t receive increased protection­s at this meeting while a bunch of wonderful weirdos won conservati­on victories,” Tanya Sanerib, internatio­nal legal director at the Center for Biological Diversity, said in a statement. “In the midst of a heart-wrenching extinction crisis, we need global agreement to fight for all species, even when it’s contentiou­s.”

 ?? Associated Press file photo ?? An internatio­nal conference on trade in endangered species ended Friday in Panama, with protection­s establishe­d for more than 500 species, including elephants hunted for ivory.
Associated Press file photo An internatio­nal conference on trade in endangered species ended Friday in Panama, with protection­s establishe­d for more than 500 species, including elephants hunted for ivory.

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