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Risks to Birds Traded for African Traditional Medicine: A Quantitative Assessment

Few regional or continent-wide assessments of bird use for traditional medicine have been attempted anywhere in the world. Africa has the highest known diversity of bird species used for this purpose. This study assesses the vulnerability of 354 bird species used for traditional medicine in 25 Afric...

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Autores principales: Williams, Vivienne L., Cunningham, Anthony B., Kemp, Alan C., Bruyns, Robin K.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2014
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4146541/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25162700
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0105397
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author Williams, Vivienne L.
Cunningham, Anthony B.
Kemp, Alan C.
Bruyns, Robin K.
author_facet Williams, Vivienne L.
Cunningham, Anthony B.
Kemp, Alan C.
Bruyns, Robin K.
author_sort Williams, Vivienne L.
collection PubMed
description Few regional or continent-wide assessments of bird use for traditional medicine have been attempted anywhere in the world. Africa has the highest known diversity of bird species used for this purpose. This study assesses the vulnerability of 354 bird species used for traditional medicine in 25 African countries, from 205 genera, 70 families, and 25 orders. The orders most represented were Passeriformes (107 species), Falconiformes (45 species), and Coraciiformes (24 species), and the families Accipitridae (37 species), Ardeidae (15 species), and Bucerotidae (12 species). The Barn owl (Tyto alba) was the most widely sold species (seven countries). The similarity of avifaunal orders traded is high (analogous to “morphospecies”, and using Sørensen's index), which suggests opportunities for a common understanding of cultural factors driving demand. The highest similarity was between bird orders sold in markets of Benin vs. Burkina Faso (90%), but even bird orders sold in two geographically separated countries (Benin vs. South Africa and Nigeria vs. South Africa) were 87% and 81% similar, respectively. Rabinowitz's “7 forms of rarity” model, used to group species according to commonness or rarity, indicated that 24% of traded bird species are very common, locally abundant in several habitats, and occur over a large geographical area, but 10% are rare, occur in low numbers in specific habitats, and over a small geographical area. The order with the highest proportion of rare species was the Musophagiformes. An analysis of species mass (as a proxy for size) indicated that large and/or conspicuous species tend to be targeted by harvesters for the traditional medicine trade. Furthermore, based on cluster analyses for species groups of similar risk, vultures, hornbills, and other large avifauna, such as bustards, are most threatened by selective harvesting and should be prioritised for conservation action.
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spelling pubmed-41465412014-08-29 Risks to Birds Traded for African Traditional Medicine: A Quantitative Assessment Williams, Vivienne L. Cunningham, Anthony B. Kemp, Alan C. Bruyns, Robin K. PLoS One Research Article Few regional or continent-wide assessments of bird use for traditional medicine have been attempted anywhere in the world. Africa has the highest known diversity of bird species used for this purpose. This study assesses the vulnerability of 354 bird species used for traditional medicine in 25 African countries, from 205 genera, 70 families, and 25 orders. The orders most represented were Passeriformes (107 species), Falconiformes (45 species), and Coraciiformes (24 species), and the families Accipitridae (37 species), Ardeidae (15 species), and Bucerotidae (12 species). The Barn owl (Tyto alba) was the most widely sold species (seven countries). The similarity of avifaunal orders traded is high (analogous to “morphospecies”, and using Sørensen's index), which suggests opportunities for a common understanding of cultural factors driving demand. The highest similarity was between bird orders sold in markets of Benin vs. Burkina Faso (90%), but even bird orders sold in two geographically separated countries (Benin vs. South Africa and Nigeria vs. South Africa) were 87% and 81% similar, respectively. Rabinowitz's “7 forms of rarity” model, used to group species according to commonness or rarity, indicated that 24% of traded bird species are very common, locally abundant in several habitats, and occur over a large geographical area, but 10% are rare, occur in low numbers in specific habitats, and over a small geographical area. The order with the highest proportion of rare species was the Musophagiformes. An analysis of species mass (as a proxy for size) indicated that large and/or conspicuous species tend to be targeted by harvesters for the traditional medicine trade. Furthermore, based on cluster analyses for species groups of similar risk, vultures, hornbills, and other large avifauna, such as bustards, are most threatened by selective harvesting and should be prioritised for conservation action. Public Library of Science 2014-08-27 /pmc/articles/PMC4146541/ /pubmed/25162700 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0105397 Text en © 2014 Williams et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Williams, Vivienne L.
Cunningham, Anthony B.
Kemp, Alan C.
Bruyns, Robin K.
Risks to Birds Traded for African Traditional Medicine: A Quantitative Assessment
title Risks to Birds Traded for African Traditional Medicine: A Quantitative Assessment
title_full Risks to Birds Traded for African Traditional Medicine: A Quantitative Assessment
title_fullStr Risks to Birds Traded for African Traditional Medicine: A Quantitative Assessment
title_full_unstemmed Risks to Birds Traded for African Traditional Medicine: A Quantitative Assessment
title_short Risks to Birds Traded for African Traditional Medicine: A Quantitative Assessment
title_sort risks to birds traded for african traditional medicine: a quantitative assessment
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4146541/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25162700
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0105397
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