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The United States dried seahorse trade: A comparison of traditional Chinese medicine and ecommerce-curio markets using molecular identification

Tens of millions of dried seahorses (genus Hippocampus) are traded annually, and the pressure from this trade along with their life history traits (involved parental care and small migration distances and home ranges) has led to near global population declines. This and other forms of overexploitati...

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Autores principales: Boehm, J. T., Bovee, Eric, Harris, Stephen E., Eddins, Kathryn, Akahoho, Ishmael, Foster, Marcia, Pell, Susan K., Hickerson, Michael J., Amato, George, DeSalle, Rob, Waldman, John
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10547177/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37788253
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0291874
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author Boehm, J. T.
Bovee, Eric
Harris, Stephen E.
Eddins, Kathryn
Akahoho, Ishmael
Foster, Marcia
Pell, Susan K.
Hickerson, Michael J.
Amato, George
DeSalle, Rob
Waldman, John
author_facet Boehm, J. T.
Bovee, Eric
Harris, Stephen E.
Eddins, Kathryn
Akahoho, Ishmael
Foster, Marcia
Pell, Susan K.
Hickerson, Michael J.
Amato, George
DeSalle, Rob
Waldman, John
author_sort Boehm, J. T.
collection PubMed
description Tens of millions of dried seahorses (genus Hippocampus) are traded annually, and the pressure from this trade along with their life history traits (involved parental care and small migration distances and home ranges) has led to near global population declines. This and other forms of overexploitation have led to all seahorse species being listed in Appendix II under the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora (CITES). The signatory nations of CITES recommended a 10-cm size limit of seahorses to ensure harvested individuals have reached reproductive maturity, and have thus had the chance to produce offspring, to maintain a more sustainable global seahorse fishery. We assessed adherence to CITES recommendations using DNA barcoding and size measurements to compare two prominent U.S. dried seahorse markets: (1) traditional Chinese medicine (TCM), and (2) non-medicinal ecommerce and coastal curio (ECC). We also estimated U.S. import abundance from CITES records. Of the nine species identified among all samples (n = 532), eight were found in the TCM trade (n = 168); composed mostly (75%) of the Indo-Pacific species Hippocampus trimaculatus, and Hippocampus spinosissimus, and the Latin American Hippocampus ingens. In contrast, ECC samples (n = 344) included 5 species, primarily juvenile Indo-Pacific Hippocampus kuda (51.5%) and the western Atlantic Hippocampus zosterae (40.7). The majority of TCM samples (85.7%) met the CITES size recommendation, in contrast to 4.8% of ECC samples. These results suggest non-size discriminatory bycatch is the most likely source of imported ECC specimens. In addition, CITES records indicate that approximately 602,275 dried specimens were imported into the U.S. from 2004–2020, but the exact species composition remains unknown as many U.S. imports records list one species or Hippocampus spp. from confiscated shipments due to difficulties in morphological identification and large numbers of individuals per shipment. Molecular identification was used to identify the species composition of confiscated shipment imports containing undesignated species, and similar to TCM, found H. trimaculatus and H. spinosissimus the most abundant. By combining DNA barcoding, size comparisons, and CITES database records, these results provide an important glimpse into the two primary dried U.S. seahorse end-markets, and may further inform the conservation status of several Hippocampus species.
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spelling pubmed-105471772023-10-04 The United States dried seahorse trade: A comparison of traditional Chinese medicine and ecommerce-curio markets using molecular identification Boehm, J. T. Bovee, Eric Harris, Stephen E. Eddins, Kathryn Akahoho, Ishmael Foster, Marcia Pell, Susan K. Hickerson, Michael J. Amato, George DeSalle, Rob Waldman, John PLoS One Research Article Tens of millions of dried seahorses (genus Hippocampus) are traded annually, and the pressure from this trade along with their life history traits (involved parental care and small migration distances and home ranges) has led to near global population declines. This and other forms of overexploitation have led to all seahorse species being listed in Appendix II under the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora (CITES). The signatory nations of CITES recommended a 10-cm size limit of seahorses to ensure harvested individuals have reached reproductive maturity, and have thus had the chance to produce offspring, to maintain a more sustainable global seahorse fishery. We assessed adherence to CITES recommendations using DNA barcoding and size measurements to compare two prominent U.S. dried seahorse markets: (1) traditional Chinese medicine (TCM), and (2) non-medicinal ecommerce and coastal curio (ECC). We also estimated U.S. import abundance from CITES records. Of the nine species identified among all samples (n = 532), eight were found in the TCM trade (n = 168); composed mostly (75%) of the Indo-Pacific species Hippocampus trimaculatus, and Hippocampus spinosissimus, and the Latin American Hippocampus ingens. In contrast, ECC samples (n = 344) included 5 species, primarily juvenile Indo-Pacific Hippocampus kuda (51.5%) and the western Atlantic Hippocampus zosterae (40.7). The majority of TCM samples (85.7%) met the CITES size recommendation, in contrast to 4.8% of ECC samples. These results suggest non-size discriminatory bycatch is the most likely source of imported ECC specimens. In addition, CITES records indicate that approximately 602,275 dried specimens were imported into the U.S. from 2004–2020, but the exact species composition remains unknown as many U.S. imports records list one species or Hippocampus spp. from confiscated shipments due to difficulties in morphological identification and large numbers of individuals per shipment. Molecular identification was used to identify the species composition of confiscated shipment imports containing undesignated species, and similar to TCM, found H. trimaculatus and H. spinosissimus the most abundant. By combining DNA barcoding, size comparisons, and CITES database records, these results provide an important glimpse into the two primary dried U.S. seahorse end-markets, and may further inform the conservation status of several Hippocampus species. Public Library of Science 2023-10-03 /pmc/articles/PMC10547177/ /pubmed/37788253 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0291874 Text en © 2023 Boehm et al https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Boehm, J. T.
Bovee, Eric
Harris, Stephen E.
Eddins, Kathryn
Akahoho, Ishmael
Foster, Marcia
Pell, Susan K.
Hickerson, Michael J.
Amato, George
DeSalle, Rob
Waldman, John
The United States dried seahorse trade: A comparison of traditional Chinese medicine and ecommerce-curio markets using molecular identification
title The United States dried seahorse trade: A comparison of traditional Chinese medicine and ecommerce-curio markets using molecular identification
title_full The United States dried seahorse trade: A comparison of traditional Chinese medicine and ecommerce-curio markets using molecular identification
title_fullStr The United States dried seahorse trade: A comparison of traditional Chinese medicine and ecommerce-curio markets using molecular identification
title_full_unstemmed The United States dried seahorse trade: A comparison of traditional Chinese medicine and ecommerce-curio markets using molecular identification
title_short The United States dried seahorse trade: A comparison of traditional Chinese medicine and ecommerce-curio markets using molecular identification
title_sort united states dried seahorse trade: a comparison of traditional chinese medicine and ecommerce-curio markets using molecular identification
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10547177/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37788253
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0291874
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