Assessing Africa-Wide Pangolin Exploitation by Scaling Local Data

dc.contributor.author

Ingram, DJ

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Coad, L

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Abernethy, KA

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Maisels, F

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Stokes, EJ

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Bobo, KS

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Breuer, T

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Gandiwa, E

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Ghiurghi, A

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Greengrass, E

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Holmern, T

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Kamgaing, TOW

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Ndong Obiang, AM

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Poulsen, JR

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Schleicher, J

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Nielsen, MR

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Solly, H

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Vath, CL

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Waltert, M

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Whitham, CEL

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Wilkie, DS

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Scharlemann, JPW

dc.date.accessioned

2018-11-02T03:24:16Z

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2018-11-02T03:24:16Z

dc.date.issued

2018-03

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2018-11-02T03:24:12Z

dc.description.abstract

Copyright and Photocopying: © 2017 The Authors. Conservation Letters published by Wiley Periodicals, Inc. Overexploitation is one of the main pressures driving wildlife closer to extinction, yet broad-scale data to evaluate species’ declines are limited. Using African pangolins (Family: Pholidota) as a case study, we demonstrate that collating local-scale data can provide crucial information on regional trends in exploitation of threatened species to inform conservation actions and policy. We estimate that 0.4-2.7 million pangolins are hunted annually in Central African forests. The number of pangolins hunted has increased by ∼150% and the proportion of pangolins of all vertebrates hunted increased from 0.04% to 1.83% over the past four decades. However, there were no trends in pangolins observed at markets, suggesting use of alternative supply chains. The price of giant (Smutsia gigantea) and arboreal (Phataginus sp.) pangolins in urban markets has increased 5.8 and 2.3 times respectively, mirroring trends in Asian pangolins. Efforts and resources are needed to increase law enforcement and population monitoring, and investigate linkages between subsistence hunting and illegal wildlife trade.

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1755-263X

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1755-263X

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https://hdl.handle.net/10161/17625

dc.language

English

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Wiley

dc.relation.ispartof

Conservation Letters

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10.1111/conl.12389

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Science & Technology

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Life Sciences & Biomedicine

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Biodiversity Conservation

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Biodiversity & Conservation

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Africa

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hunting

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market

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OFFTAKE

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pangolins

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trade

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wild meat

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TRADE

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SUSTAINABILITY

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ENFORCEMENT

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KNOWLEDGE

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SYSTEM

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AREAS

dc.title

Assessing Africa-Wide Pangolin Exploitation by Scaling Local Data

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Journal article

duke.contributor.orcid

Poulsen, JR|0000-0002-1532-9808

pubs.begin-page

e12389

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e12389

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2

pubs.organisational-group

Nicholas School of the Environment

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Duke

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Environmental Sciences and Policy

pubs.publication-status

Published

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11

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