- The
tree-dwelling lizards of the Abronia genus, native to Mexico and Central
America, are traded internationally, often illegally, to supply the exotic
pet market.
- Customs
officials have found them hidden in socks, concealed in car trunks or
squeezed into the double-depth of a portfolio.
- Mexico
in 2016 recommended that all 29 Abronia species be listed in the CITES
Appendix II, which would impose restrictions on their international trade,
but legal traders say this will drive illegal trafficking of the lizards
even deeper underground.
They
don’t fly, nor do they breathe fire from their mouths, but the “little dragons”
of the Abronia genus are the latest craze on the pet reptile market. Far from
the image of the huge monsters made popular by TV series such as “Game of
Thrones,” these Mexican lizards are completely harmless, although they do have
one thing in common: enemies putting them in danger.
In
Mexico, they’re known as “scorpions” because they’re thought to be venomous, so
“little dragons” is a euphemism meant to improve their reputation so that
people don’t indiscriminately kill them.
However,
this new name may have catapulted them to unwanted international fame. Hidden
in socks inside suitcases, concealed in car trunks or squeezed into portfolios,
the little dragons are illegally removed from the country by smugglers who can
sell each one for up to $2,000, says Gustavo Jiménez, managing director of Vida Silvestre COATL, a conservation
nonprofit that carried out an analysis of the conservation status of the 29
Abronia species in 2015.
The traffickers try to take the largest number of specimens
possible out of Mexico, knowing that many won’t survive the journey due to the
poor conditions in which they’re transported. Image by PROFEPA.
In
the report on the Abronia genus to be included in Appendix II of the Convention
on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora (CITES),
there is a confirmed record of Mexican specimens being traded as far as
Germany, the Czech Republic, France, Sweden, the United Kingdom, Switzerland,
China and the United States.
The
main points of sale in Mexico City are the markets of Sonora, Nuevo San Lázaro,
Emilio Carranza, and La Viga, with some traders licensed, but many more not,
according to Jiménez.
“The
largest numbers are taken from places where there are abundant populations
close to towns, or at least where there are roads, for example, Chignahuapan
[in Puebla state], Puerto del Aire [in Veracruz] and San Cristóbal de las Casas
[in Chiapas],” Jiménez tells Mongabay Latam. A. graminea is found in
Chignahuapan and Puerto del Aire, A. taeniata in Chignahuapan, and A.
lytrochyla in San Cristóbal, Jiménez says. “This is what we understand from
what the inhabitants have told us, but we are uncertain of the origin of these
animals when the traffickers carry them.”
The
lizard trade also involves the use of children, who capture the animals for $1
or $2 each. The smugglers purchase as many as 100 or 200 Abronias at a time
from children or people in a position of financial need, and then take them to
Mexico City, from where they distribute the lizards to other areas, including
across the border to the United States, Jiménez says.
Traffickers often hide the little lizards in socks. Image by
PROFEPA.
Authorities
seized 97 specimens of A. Graminea, A. oaxacae and A. lythrochila between 2005
and 2017, according to data from the Federal Attorney’s Office for
Environmental Protection (PROFEPA). But there are no accurate figures for how
many of the lizards have been successfully smuggled out of Mexico.
The
government permits the legal trade in a handful of Abronia species, says
Joaquín Villegas, managing director of Coatlán, a wildlife conservation
organization. “The most commercial is Abronia graminea, which is a little green
dragon, followed by Abronia taeniata,” he says.
Its
fantastical hues may have inspired the colorful alebrije folk art sculptures
typically found in the Mexican state of Oaxaca, but A. mixteca’s once abundant
presence in the state has declined dramatically due to capture for the
pet trade, according to CITES.
Abronias are ideally suited to living in trees. It’s their
triangular head, wide, strong jaw, and scale-covered back and tail that give
them the indisputable appearance of a cartoon dragon.
Across the Atlantic, the market for these lizards as exotic
pets is “practically the whole of Europe,” says Paola Mosig, coordinator of the
CITES scientific authority of Mexico’s National Commission for the Knowledge
and Use of Biodiversity (CONABIO). “Spanish, German and Dutch authorities have
approached Mexico with a list of species that have illegally arrived over the
past three years, and the Abronia genus was among them,” she adds.
Dragon fanatics and young people with a hobby of acquiring
wild species are among the buyers. “Lately, especially in the United States and
Europe, it has become fashionable to have reptilian pets. They don’t need that
much care, and now that people are really busy there has been a surge in demand
for these reptiles,” Mosig says.
Social networks like Facebook have become the new forum for
the illegal trade in many species. “We find adverts for Abronias in many
groups,” Villegas says. “We are able to track some of them when they are
offered on the online market. Looking at the animals seen in the photographs,
[they] have wounded tails or parasites like mites living freely on them.”
Abronia smithi. Image
by Elí García Padilla.
The
young hobbyist collectors of little dragons are the kind who have “reached a
point in their collection where they can no longer legally obtain the species
they are looking for,” says Villegas, whose own organization is registered with
the government to sell exotic wildlife.
“The
trafficking of these species is unprecedented,” says Omar Escobedo, director of
another registered wildlife retailer, Moloch Reptiles, and technical
coordinator at the Michin Aquarium in the city of Guadalajara. Legal traders
need the proper paperwork for each lizard they sell, but there’s nothing
stopping illicit traders from reusing older permits. “I have detected at least
200 instances where their permits had been copied using our format and our
usage number,” Escobedo tells Mongabay Latam. “It’s outrageous, but it’s very
common in the wildlife trade.”
Capture for the pet trade and the rapid loss of habitat are the
main threats faced by the little dragons. Pictured is an Abronia lythochila
specimen. Image by Peter Heimes.
International trade restrictions
At
the 2016 CITES conference, Mexico and the European Union requested that the
entire Abronia genus, 29 species in total, be listed in
the convention’s Appendix II, which would subject the trade in the species to
strict regulations. This call for greater protection of these species was
justified on the basis of low reproductive potential and the conservation
status of their wild populations.
“Prior
to their incorporation into the CITES [Appendix II], sales of Abronia in Europe
were carried out using specially made false permits to mislead the public,”
says Inés Arroyo, a specialist in environmental crimes at the National
Autonomous University of Mexico’s (UNAM) Regional Center of Multidisciplinary
Investigations.
Her
own investigations indicate that the entire trade in Abronia species between
Mexico and the EU is illegal, since there’s no data on any single instance of a
legal sale of a specimen. “They are endangered species, they are moving through
illegal routes, and the quantities, volumes, how many are leaving, and by what
mechanisms, is unclear,” Arroyo says. She warns that this problem needs to be
tackled using a multidisciplinary approach involving academic institutions,
governments, intelligence agencies and international law enforcement.
Arroyo
says some of those involved in the lizard trade “don’t care about conservation,
they only care about money. They aren’t bothered if Abronias die out. This is
what’s called market substitution: If one type of animal is no longer
available, they find another. These people have a criminal profile for which
CITES is a hindrance, and they are going to find ways to turn the system upside
down in order to smuggle the animals.”
The splendor of the little dragon is diminished when it’s taken
out of its natural environment. Image by PROFEPA.
Tanya
Wyatt, co-author with Arroyo of a report on
the illegal trade in wildlife between Mexico and the European Union, says the
majority of Abronia seizures occur at Mexico City’s international airport. She
says there need to be new international regulations to tackle the illegal
trade, as well as better training for customs officials to be able to identify
species and distinguish if they are Abronias or other protected wildlife.
CONABIO’s
findings, presented to CITES and based on international trade data compiled
through official enquiries and internet searches, shows an international market
for at least five species native to Mexico that don’t have legal export
authorization: A. martindelcampoi, A. smithi, A. deppii, A. lythrochila and A.
mixteca.
CONABIO
says “the primary destination of these specimens is the Terraristika Hamm trade
fair” in Germany, billed as Europe’s largest reptile fair. The specimens are
transported within travelers’ luggage, or shipped by courier, first to Spain
and France, where they’re kept prior to the fair. Another destination is the United
States, where specimens are brought in through border points such as Tijuana,
and subsequently distributed from Texas and California. Within Mexico itself,
the Abronia trade relies on public buses and private cars to transport
specimens from the areas where they’re captured to urban centers like Mexico
City, Puebla and Tuxtla Gutiérrez, CONABIO says
.
“I
think CITES [protection] is a good idea,” Jiménez says. “A step has been taken
toward conserving the Abronias, because even though it’s said that CITES isn’t
going to solve the problem, it is, in itself, progress. Overseas consumers are
now going to seek Abronias that have documentation. This means they are going
to expect the Mexicans to sell them with papers, and this may produce
sustainable development alternatives within communities instead of fostering
trafficking.”
Little dragons such as Abronia graminea have very striking
emerald, bluish-green and turquoise colors, which attract the attention of
collectors. Image by PROFEPA.
Legal Trade
But
for Escobedo, the legal seller, this newly imposed restriction on the trade
will hurt the livelihood those who do it within the law, and will only drive
the illegal practice deeper underground. “At any time, a point might be reached
where the danger of extinction is going to present itself,” he says. “Species
that were once common are going to go into special protection and thus we are
successively going to nudge all species higher up the risk category.”
The little dragons, or tree scorpions as they are commonly
known, are insectivorous lizards that inhabit the trees of the forests of
Mexico, Guatemala, Honduras and El Salvador. Image by Raul Gómez Trejo.
Villegas,
the other legal trader, says those like him don’t have the capacity to compete
with the illegal traders. “Those of us who do this legally invest in facilities
for the reproduction and maintenance of the specimens, whereas the others spend
very little on removing wildlife from the freedom of its natural habitat and
they sell it at a similar or slightly lower price than that of a legal
specimen,” he says. “This makes the illegal trade strong, plus there is high
demand.” Villegas says wanting one of these animals for a pet isn’t a bad
thing, but it’s highly important that buyers educate themselves about the
species they’re acquiring, not just to ensure they purchase them through legal
channels, but also to support the conservation of the species.
Buyers
must demand that sellers provide the documentation to prove the legal origin of
the species and endeavor to treat the specimens they acquire both humanely and
appropriately.
While
films and books continue to popularize fantastical stories of great dragons,
these real-life little Mexican lizards may one day fade from the forests that
they inhabit in Mexico and Central America and into the realm of legend unless
there’s greater awareness about the need to protect and conserve them.
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