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PAT R I C K B R O W N
EXTINCTION
TR
AD
ING
TO
EX
TIN
CT
ION
Th
e ille
ga
l an
ima
l trad
e
T h e i l l e g a l a n i m a l t r a d e
PA
TR
ICK
BR
OW
N
t oTRADING
Trading in Extinction
Patr ick Brown
The i l legal wi ldl i fe trade in Asia
T R A D I N G EXTINCTION
t o
T h e i l l e g a l a n i m a l t r a d e
P h o t o g r a p h s o f
B y P a t r i c k B r o w n
For my family and other animals
I n t r o d u c t i o n
Booming markets created by globalisation and the ease of smuggling has boosted this trade on new and uncontrollable levels. It is estimated that wildlife traders export 25,000-30,000 primates every year - along with 2-5 million birds, 10 million reptile skins, and more than 500 million tropical fish.
The exploitation of wildlife is centuries old. Thirteenth-century Cambodia boasted thriving markets for tigers, panthers, bears, wild boars, stags and gibbons. China has long pillaged the animal world for its supposed medici-nal benefits, and today remains one of the trade’s biggest players. With the arrival in Asia of European colonialists, and soaring demand from Japan, Taiwan and South Korea, the killing rose to the record levels we see today.
Some animal parts have been embued with near-magical properties. Su-perstitious Chinese believe eating the flesh of a tiger will give them some of the animal’s strength, while tiger’s penis is highly prized as an aphro-disiac. Countless other animal parts--rhinocerous horn, shark fin, bear gall bladder, monkey brain--have been credited with similar potency. Sci-entific studies have proved these beliefs wrong, yet the trade of animals continues largely unchecked, fueled by ignorance, greed and corruption.
The animal trade is now so large it could have irrevocable consequences for life on our planet. More and more species now stand at the verge of ex-tinction. The disappearance of key animals such as tigers disrupts the food chain, which in turn affects the balance of nature. In India, environmental abuse and the annihilation of animal life has turned lush jungles into empty deserts. Similar nightmare scenarios are being played out across the globe.
Attempts to halt the animal trade have so far been too little, too late. One big problem is catching the traders, many of whom are known to anti-trafficking authorities, but who operate unhindered due to of-ficial corruption and inertia. Small-time operators - usually impover-ished locals forced into poaching and trading animals on the black mar-ket – are caught and jailed, but the powerful traders remain at large.
The problem seems insurmountable. But one way of curbing this ram-pant killing is to educate future generations. We must remove an-tiquated and false beliefs about the potency of animal parts, there-by decreasing the demand for them. Remove the consumer, and we are one step closer to halting this destructive and unnecessary trade.
From the pristine jungles of Cambodia to the great national parks of India and Nepal, Asian wildlife is being plundered and trafficked on an unprecedented scale.
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