More
than 5,500 species of birds, mammals, amphibians and reptiles are bought and
sold on the worldwide animal market, a volume that is around 50 percent higher than
earlier estimates, a study published in Science said Thursday.
The
legal and illegal trade of wildlife as pets or for animal products is a
multi-billion-dollar industry, and recognized as one of the most severe threats
to biodiversity.
But the
extent of the trade has remained poorly understood.
The
research by scientists at the University of Florida and University of Sheffield
found that threatened and endangered species were disproportionately
represented.
Overall,
5,579 of the 31,745 vertebrate species are traded, or 18 percent.
Among
mammals, the figure rises to 27 percent, with the animals mainly used to
produce products—for example pangolins, which are killed for their scales and
for their meat.
Amphibians
and reptiles are more often sold as exotic pets or to zoos, while 23 percent of
bird species are traded, both as companion animals and for their use in
medicine.
There
is a growing demand, for example, for the ivory-like casque of the helmeted
hornbill, which has resulted in tens of thousands being traded since 2012.
The
authors predicted that future trade, both legal and illegal, will add up to
3,196 more species to the list, mainly threatened or endangered, based on
similarities with currently exploited species—for example, the African
pangolin, which started to be exploited after Asian pangolins became harder to
find.
"Often,
species are flagged for conservation only after a severe decline is
documented," they concluded.
More information: B.R. Scheffers el al., "Global
wildlife trade across the tree of life," Science (2019). science.sciencemag.org/cgi/doi … 1126/science.aav5327
Journal information: Science
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