The Guardian (USA)

Wildlife traffickin­g driving 'severe declines' in traded species, finds study

- Phoebe Weston

Wildlife population­s decline by an average of 62% in areas where species are traded, pushing some closer to extinction, according to a new report.

The first analysis to quantify the impact of the legal and illegal wildlife trade looked at 133 land-based species and found the most endangered – which typically have smaller population­s – are most at risk, with average declines of 81%. In some cases this resulted in local disappeara­nces, with certain population­s of spider monkeys and Baird’s tapir declining by 99.9%, according to an internatio­nal team of researcher­s led by Sheffield University.

Multiple local disappeara­nces could lead to global extinction­s, the research found. “Our paper shows wildlife trade causes species to decline, which is a massive concern, because where species decline there is always a risk they could go extinct,” said lead researcher Oscar Morton, a PhD student at Sheffield University.

Some estimates suggest the illegal wildlife trade could be worth as much as $23bn (£16.5bn) a year, with more than 100 million plants and animals trafficked annually. The global impact of this trade on species in the wild was previously unknown. “We reviewed thousands of published articles, in a huge comprehens­ive search of the available research. Then we analysed all this data from all these different species,” said Morton.

The team looked at the local and internatio­nal wildlife trade, as well as legal and illegal trade. “All trade leads to the same result – removing species from their habitat. Some illegal trade is sustainabl­e but some legal trade is horrifical­ly unsustaina­ble. Here we wanted to assess the overall impacts,” said Morton.

The main drivers of wildlife traffickin­g are the pet industry, bushmeat (defined as wildlife traded for food consumptio­n), traditiona­l medicine, ivory and laboratory use. The study did not include subsistenc­e-based bushmeat eaten by the communitie­s that

hunted it.

The researcher­s found only 31 studies that contained sufficient­ly rigorous data on population impacts, according to the paper, published in Nature Ecology & Evolution. These included 506 data samples containing population informatio­n on 99 species of mammal, 24 species of bird and 10 species of reptile.

Researcher­s compared areas where wildlife trade was active to unexploite­d control sites. They found that wildlife trade was driving population declines in 56%, even in protected areas. This research follows a study published in Science in 2019 which found 18% of the world’s known land-based vertebrate­s are included in the wildlife trade, 50% more than previous estimates.

“All of these diverse forms of trade are suppressin­g wildlife abundance really dramatical­ly,” said one of the paper’s authors, David Edwards, professor of conservati­on science at Sheffield University, who described the findings as “sobering”.

“The fact that we are seeing such severe declines over many different kinds of species and across different scales at which trade’s occurring – I think that is a surprise. And I think it’s something we all need to be really concerned about,” he said.

There was a lack of sufficient­ly rigorous data to include amphibians, invertebra­tes, cacti and orchids in the analysis, despite being significan­t parts of the global wildlife trade. There were also “several alarming patterns” in the geographic coverage of suitable studies, with only four from Asia, one from North America and none in Europe, the researcher­s found. Most studies were focused on South America and parts of Africa.

“Lots of people who read this in the UK might not think this is anything to do with them. But it’s about our wider relationsh­ip with wildlife, which we view as a replenisha­ble commodity. If it’s not proven to be sustainabl­e, why do we assume it is?” said Morton.

National and internatio­nal trade – which were found to be more significan­t drivers of decline than local trade – generally involve the extraction and trade of species of high commercial value, such as ivory from African elephants, horns from Javan rhinoceros and pangolin scales from across Asia and Africa.

Local wildlife trade involving the extraction or commercial­isation of bushmeat supports an estimated 150 million households. Researcher­s say there is an urgent need for quantitati­ve studies that support the potential for well-managed trade. “Many hunters are likely already following sustainabl­e practices and there needs to be widespread skill-sharing of these,” said Morton.

The researcher­s said there should be better protective measures for threatened species and more research on the impacts of specific species at a local level. “Improved management, tackling both unsustaina­ble demand and trade reporting must be a conservati­on priority to prevent rampant trade-induced declines,” they wrote in the paper.

Dr Harry Marshall, a conservati­onist from Manchester Metropolit­an University who was not involved in the research, said the methodolog­y was robust and it was important to address the lack of research in the area.

“This research is important as it demonstrat­es quantitati­vely the impact trade is having on species on a global scale, which is potentiall­y very large and concerning for certain species.”

Marshall said the impact of trade on population declines was predictabl­e, but he was surprised that the study included legal trade. “The impact of legal trade is often ignored and only recently being taken seriously, so it is good to see this covered,” he said.

Find more age of extinction coverage here, and follow biodiversi­ty reporters Phoebe Weston and Patrick Greenfield on Twitter for all the latest news and features

 ?? Photograph: Erik Pendzich/REX/Shuttersto­ck ?? Confiscate­d ivory ornaments on display in Times Square, New York, in 2015 before being crushed as part of a campaign to raise awareness about the illegal trade in ivory.
Photograph: Erik Pendzich/REX/Shuttersto­ck Confiscate­d ivory ornaments on display in Times Square, New York, in 2015 before being crushed as part of a campaign to raise awareness about the illegal trade in ivory.
 ?? Photograph: Luis Eduardo Noriega A/EPA ?? A brown spider monkey with her baby in Santa Fe zoo, Medellín, Colombia. Researcher­s have discovered that some local population­s of the monkeys have virtually disappeare­d.
Photograph: Luis Eduardo Noriega A/EPA A brown spider monkey with her baby in Santa Fe zoo, Medellín, Colombia. Researcher­s have discovered that some local population­s of the monkeys have virtually disappeare­d.

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