New safeguards agreed for world’s most trafficked mammal

By Matt McGrath for the BBC.

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A little known species driven to the edge of extinction by poaching has gained extra protection at the Cites meeting in South Africa.

Pangolins are slow moving, nocturnal creatures found across Asia and Africa but over a million have been taken from the wild in the last decade.

The trade is being driven principally by demand for their scales, which are used in traditional Chinese medicine.

Now the Cites meeting has agreed to ban all trade in eight species of Pangolin.

Scales of destruction

As the world’s only mammal covered in scales, these species are sometimes known as scaly anteaters. The creatures have very long, sticky tongues. These come in very handy when searching for ants, their favourite food

However these scales, which the animal uses for protection, are one of the key reasons for their demise.

In traditional Chinese medicine they are dried and roasted and used for a variety of ailments including excessive nervousness, hysterical crying, palsy and to aid lactation.

As well as the scales, the meat of the Pangolin is eaten as bush meat in many parts of Africa and in China it has become something of a delicacy.

The level of illegal trade is astonishing. Between January and September this year, authorities seized more than 18,000 tonnes of Pangolin scales across 19 countries.

The majority of these scales came from African pangolins in Cameroon, Nigeria and Ghana. Experts estimate that each kilogramme of scales requires the killing of three or four animals. It is believed that pangolins make up around 20% of all illegal trade in species.

Zero quotas

All pangolins are already listed on Appendix II but with a zero quota for Asian species. This has caused major problems say conservationists.

pangolinImage copyrightTIKKI HYWOOD TRUST
Image captionPangolins only produce one offspring per year, limiting their ability to recover from poaching
PangolinImage copyrightGETTY IMAGES
Image captionThe trade in frozen pangolin scales and meat is one of the biggest illegal markets

“When pangolins are just in their product forms as scales or meat it’s impossible to tell the Asian ones from the African ones,” said Jeff Flocken from the International Fund for Animal Welfare (IFAW).

“Up to now all Pangolins were on Appendix II with zero quota trade in the Asian species, but what that allowed was a massive trade in African species and also enabled a whole mechanism for laundering Asian ones as African ones which are legal.”

Here at the Cites meeting, range state countries proposed that four species of African pangolins and four Asian varieties be up-listed to Appendix I meaning that all commercial trade would be stopped and greater protection demanded from law enforcement.

There was widespread support for the move, with few dissenting voices. All over the large hall, stuffed toy pangolins could be seen on desks, indicating sympathy for the plight of this little known species.

Indonesia objected to the up-listing of two Asian species, the Sunda and Chinese pangolins but the conference voted overwhelmingly to include them.

PangolinImage copyrightSPL
Image captionPangolins curl into a ball when threatened which is useful against predators but not against poachers

“This is a huge win and rare piece of good news for some of the world’s most trafficked and endangered animals,” said Ginette Hemley from WWF.

“Giving Pangolins full protection under Cites will eliminate any question about legality of trade, making it harder for criminals to traffic them and increasing the consequences for those who do.”

Some objections had been expected about the African species but none materialized and the Conference of the Parties accepted the extra safeguards without a vote.

“Everyone wants this, law enforcement wants this,” said Jeff Flocken from IFAW.

“When they are listed as Appendix I there will be no mistake as to what’s legal or illegal, because they will all be illegal.

“This is a clear message from the world that the pangolins are in dire need of protection and we are going to try and make it happen.”

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