Pangolins being eaten to extinction, conservationists warn

on Wednesday, September 17, 2014

Scaly anteaters are now the most illegally-traded mammal in the world, with all eight species listed as threatened
An African white-bellied pangolin – poachers are turning to African pangolins because Asian populations have been denuded. Photograph: IUCN/ZSL
Pangolins are being "eaten to extinction" due to a demand for their meat at banquets in China and Vietnam and their scales for use in Chinese medicine, conservationists have warned.

In an update last week to the authoritative Red List of endangered animals, all eight species of the scaly anteaters were upgraded to threatened status.

Resembling a pine cone on legs, they are the world's only scaly mammal, using their scales for armour to protect against predators and their long, sticky tongues to catch prey.

According to experts at the Zoological Society of London, the demand for the animals in Asia has been so great that poachers are now turning to Africa, where four of the species are found. Conservationists say there is already evidence of an underground, intercontinental trade in pangolins between Africa and Asia.

More than a million are believed to have been illegally caught in the wild over the last decade globally, giving them the unenviable record of being the most illegally-traded mammal in the world. Read more ...

Source: theguardian.com

158 elephant tusks in 6 crates seized at Thai airport

on Tuesday, July 17, 2012

Thai customs officials show 158 pieces of seized ivory in six crates during a news conference in Bangkok on Tuesday.
Thai customs officials show 158 pieces of seized ivory in six crates during a news conference in Bangkok on Tuesday. (Apichart Weerawong/Associated Press)
Thai customs officials show the seized ivory during a news conference in Bangkok, Thailand Tuesday, July 17, 2012. 158 pieces of African ivory were seized last week while an attempt to smuggle into th
Photo By Apichart Weerawong
Thai customs officials have seized 456 kilograms of African ivory — 158 elephant tusks in six crates — at Bangkok’s international airport.

The tusks were discovered Friday hidden in crates aboard a flight from Kenya. Customs officials displayed the haul Tuesday. The officials said they acted on a tip-off to seize the ivory, which was in crates labelled as handicrafts. No arrests have been made. The seized ivory probably will be destroyed. Ivory shipped to Thailand typically is used to make Buddhist carvings or jewelry. Thailand is also a transit point for other markets, including China.

The international trade in ivory was banned by an international convention known as CITES in 1989 as a measure to prevent the poaching of elephants, which has taken a huge toll on their numbers globally in recent decades

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