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Illegal trade in wild cats and its link to Chinese-led development in Central and South America
Authors:Thais Q. Morcatty  Jonathan C. Bausch Macedo  K. Anne-Isola Nekaris  Qingyong Ni  Carlos C. Durigan  Magdalena S. Svensson  Vincent Nijman
Affiliation:1. Oxford Wildlife Trade Research Group, Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences, Oxford Brookes University, Headington Campus, Oxford, OX3 0BP U.K.;2. Independent Consultant, 2221 N Salford Street, Philadelphia, PA, 19131 U.S.A.;3. RedeFauna – Research Network on Diversity, Conservation and Use of Amazonian Fauna, Brazil

Wildlife Conservation Society – Brazil, Rua Costa Azevedo 9, sala 403 - Centro, Manaus, AM, 69010-230 Brazil

Abstract:Seizures of hundreds of jaguar heads and canines in Central and South America from 2014 to 2018 resulted in worldwide media coverage suggesting that wildlife traffickers are trading jaguar body parts as substitutes for tiger parts to satisfy the demand for traditional Asian medicine. We compiled a data set of >1000 seized wild cats (jaguar [Panthera onca], puma [Puma concolor], and ocelot [Leopardus pardalis]) from 19 Central and South American countries and China. We ran generalized additive mixed models to detect trends in wild-cat seizures from 2012 to 2018 and assess the effects of socioeconomic factors of source countries and between those countries and China on the number of wild cats seized. Jaguar seizures increased over time, and most of the seized jaguar pieces were canines (1991 of 2117). Around 34% (32 of 93) of the jaguar-part seizure reports were linked with China, and these seizures contained 14-fold more individuals than those intended for domestic markets. Source countries with relatively high levels of corruption and Chinese private investment and low income per capita had 10–50 times more jaguar seizures than the remaining sampled countries. The number of Chinese residents in Central and South America was not significantly related to the number of jaguars seized. No socioeconomic factors influenced the seizures of puma and ocelots. Legal market chains may provide structure for the illegal chain; thus, the influx of illegal jaguar products is potentially a side effect of the economic partnership between Central and South American countries and China. Poverty and high levels of corruption in the source countries may motivate local people to engage in illegal activities and contribute to the growth of this trade. Supply-side interventions to curb this threat to Neotropical wild cats may include improved training for officials and promotion of governance and the value of protecting these animals to local people.
Keywords:jaguar fangs  Panthera onca  seizure  traditional Asian medicine  trafficking  wildlife trade  colmillos de jaguar  incautación  medicina tradicional asiática  mercado de fauna  tráfico  Panthera onca  美洲豹牙  美洲豹 (Panthera onca)  查获  亚洲传统医学  走私  野生动物贸易
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