Cargando…

The scale of Nigeria's involvement in the trans-national illegal pangolin trade: Temporal and spatial patterns and the effectiveness of wildlife trade regulations

The Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora (CITES) prohibits commercial trans-national trade in pangolin specimens. However, African pangolins are continually trafficked to Asia for traditional medicine, with Nigeria considered a key hub. Using reported Niger...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Emogor, Charles A., Ingram, Daniel J., Coad, Lauren, Worthington, Thomas A., Dunn, Andrew, Imong, Inaoyom, Balmford, Andrew
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Applied Science Publishers [etc.] 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8683600/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34975159
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.biocon.2021.109365
_version_ 1784617452012830720
author Emogor, Charles A.
Ingram, Daniel J.
Coad, Lauren
Worthington, Thomas A.
Dunn, Andrew
Imong, Inaoyom
Balmford, Andrew
author_facet Emogor, Charles A.
Ingram, Daniel J.
Coad, Lauren
Worthington, Thomas A.
Dunn, Andrew
Imong, Inaoyom
Balmford, Andrew
author_sort Emogor, Charles A.
collection PubMed
description The Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora (CITES) prohibits commercial trans-national trade in pangolin specimens. However, African pangolins are continually trafficked to Asia for traditional medicine, with Nigeria considered a key hub. Using reported Nigeria-linked pangolin seizure data and interviews with Nigerian law enforcement officials, we a) characterised Nigeria's involvement in global pangolin trafficking January 2010–September 2021, particularly observing trafficking trends after pangolin's CITES Appendix I listing; b) estimated the minimum number of pangolins whose scales are in Nigeria-linked seizures January 2010–September 2021, and; c) assessed ongoing efforts within Nigeria to curb pangolin trafficking. Nigeria-linked seizures involved 190,407 kg of pangolin derivatives (99.9% scales) from a minimum of 799,343 pangolins (95% confidence interval; 625,944-996,353) of four species (see caveats in Methods). All shipments confiscated in transit were destined for Asia, with a rapid increase in the mass of maritime shipments over time. Furthermore, stockpiling of pangolin derivatives for overseas shipment is perhaps a prominent trafficking model in Nigeria. Nigeria's law enforcement efforts improved from 2017, the same year Nigeria apparently began playing a hub role. The impact of pangolin's CITES Appendix I listing on pangolin trafficking was unclear, as the marked rise in seizures from 2017 when the listing became effective, coincided with improvements in Nigerian law enforcement efforts. COVID-19–induced travel restrictions likely reduced trafficking activities in 2020 but activities may have fully resumed in 2021. This study provides new information to inform effective enforcement and policy formulation efforts to protect African pangolins.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-8683600
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2021
publisher Applied Science Publishers [etc.]
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-86836002021-12-30 The scale of Nigeria's involvement in the trans-national illegal pangolin trade: Temporal and spatial patterns and the effectiveness of wildlife trade regulations Emogor, Charles A. Ingram, Daniel J. Coad, Lauren Worthington, Thomas A. Dunn, Andrew Imong, Inaoyom Balmford, Andrew Biol Conserv Article The Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora (CITES) prohibits commercial trans-national trade in pangolin specimens. However, African pangolins are continually trafficked to Asia for traditional medicine, with Nigeria considered a key hub. Using reported Nigeria-linked pangolin seizure data and interviews with Nigerian law enforcement officials, we a) characterised Nigeria's involvement in global pangolin trafficking January 2010–September 2021, particularly observing trafficking trends after pangolin's CITES Appendix I listing; b) estimated the minimum number of pangolins whose scales are in Nigeria-linked seizures January 2010–September 2021, and; c) assessed ongoing efforts within Nigeria to curb pangolin trafficking. Nigeria-linked seizures involved 190,407 kg of pangolin derivatives (99.9% scales) from a minimum of 799,343 pangolins (95% confidence interval; 625,944-996,353) of four species (see caveats in Methods). All shipments confiscated in transit were destined for Asia, with a rapid increase in the mass of maritime shipments over time. Furthermore, stockpiling of pangolin derivatives for overseas shipment is perhaps a prominent trafficking model in Nigeria. Nigeria's law enforcement efforts improved from 2017, the same year Nigeria apparently began playing a hub role. The impact of pangolin's CITES Appendix I listing on pangolin trafficking was unclear, as the marked rise in seizures from 2017 when the listing became effective, coincided with improvements in Nigerian law enforcement efforts. COVID-19–induced travel restrictions likely reduced trafficking activities in 2020 but activities may have fully resumed in 2021. This study provides new information to inform effective enforcement and policy formulation efforts to protect African pangolins. Applied Science Publishers [etc.] 2021-12 /pmc/articles/PMC8683600/ /pubmed/34975159 http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.biocon.2021.109365 Text en © 2021 The Authors https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open access article under the CC BY license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Emogor, Charles A.
Ingram, Daniel J.
Coad, Lauren
Worthington, Thomas A.
Dunn, Andrew
Imong, Inaoyom
Balmford, Andrew
The scale of Nigeria's involvement in the trans-national illegal pangolin trade: Temporal and spatial patterns and the effectiveness of wildlife trade regulations
title The scale of Nigeria's involvement in the trans-national illegal pangolin trade: Temporal and spatial patterns and the effectiveness of wildlife trade regulations
title_full The scale of Nigeria's involvement in the trans-national illegal pangolin trade: Temporal and spatial patterns and the effectiveness of wildlife trade regulations
title_fullStr The scale of Nigeria's involvement in the trans-national illegal pangolin trade: Temporal and spatial patterns and the effectiveness of wildlife trade regulations
title_full_unstemmed The scale of Nigeria's involvement in the trans-national illegal pangolin trade: Temporal and spatial patterns and the effectiveness of wildlife trade regulations
title_short The scale of Nigeria's involvement in the trans-national illegal pangolin trade: Temporal and spatial patterns and the effectiveness of wildlife trade regulations
title_sort scale of nigeria's involvement in the trans-national illegal pangolin trade: temporal and spatial patterns and the effectiveness of wildlife trade regulations
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8683600/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34975159
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.biocon.2021.109365
work_keys_str_mv AT emogorcharlesa thescaleofnigeriasinvolvementinthetransnationalillegalpangolintradetemporalandspatialpatternsandtheeffectivenessofwildlifetraderegulations
AT ingramdanielj thescaleofnigeriasinvolvementinthetransnationalillegalpangolintradetemporalandspatialpatternsandtheeffectivenessofwildlifetraderegulations
AT coadlauren thescaleofnigeriasinvolvementinthetransnationalillegalpangolintradetemporalandspatialpatternsandtheeffectivenessofwildlifetraderegulations
AT worthingtonthomasa thescaleofnigeriasinvolvementinthetransnationalillegalpangolintradetemporalandspatialpatternsandtheeffectivenessofwildlifetraderegulations
AT dunnandrew thescaleofnigeriasinvolvementinthetransnationalillegalpangolintradetemporalandspatialpatternsandtheeffectivenessofwildlifetraderegulations
AT imonginaoyom thescaleofnigeriasinvolvementinthetransnationalillegalpangolintradetemporalandspatialpatternsandtheeffectivenessofwildlifetraderegulations
AT balmfordandrew thescaleofnigeriasinvolvementinthetransnationalillegalpangolintradetemporalandspatialpatternsandtheeffectivenessofwildlifetraderegulations
AT emogorcharlesa scaleofnigeriasinvolvementinthetransnationalillegalpangolintradetemporalandspatialpatternsandtheeffectivenessofwildlifetraderegulations
AT ingramdanielj scaleofnigeriasinvolvementinthetransnationalillegalpangolintradetemporalandspatialpatternsandtheeffectivenessofwildlifetraderegulations
AT coadlauren scaleofnigeriasinvolvementinthetransnationalillegalpangolintradetemporalandspatialpatternsandtheeffectivenessofwildlifetraderegulations
AT worthingtonthomasa scaleofnigeriasinvolvementinthetransnationalillegalpangolintradetemporalandspatialpatternsandtheeffectivenessofwildlifetraderegulations
AT dunnandrew scaleofnigeriasinvolvementinthetransnationalillegalpangolintradetemporalandspatialpatternsandtheeffectivenessofwildlifetraderegulations
AT imonginaoyom scaleofnigeriasinvolvementinthetransnationalillegalpangolintradetemporalandspatialpatternsandtheeffectivenessofwildlifetraderegulations
AT balmfordandrew scaleofnigeriasinvolvementinthetransnationalillegalpangolintradetemporalandspatialpatternsandtheeffectivenessofwildlifetraderegulations