A pangolin. Photo (c) Christian Boix. |
Pangolins are gentle, toothless mammals that eat ants with their long, sticky tongues. They are covered with scales (sort of like a walking artichoke) which protect them from predators but not from humans, who simply pick them up to harvest them. Baby pangolins ride, adorably on their mothers' tails or backs, as shown in the picture here.
Photo by Firdia Lisnawati. |
How could someone look at these creatures and want to kill them? And yet pangolins are being slaughtered in large numbers because some practitioners of traditional Chinese medicine (TCM) think (wrongly!) that pangolin scales can treat nervousness or palsy. They are also being killed for meat: regrettably, pangolin meat and fetuses are considered a delicacy by some people in China.
Just a few months ago, the CITES organization (Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species) banned trade in all eight species of pangolins. We can only hope that this blanket ban is not too late. Previously CITES had declared that Asian pangolins were endangered, but had allowed trade in African pangolins, but because the meat is indistinguishable, the limited ban did little to stop the widespread killing of Asian pangolins. Just before the CITES meeting, Annamiticus (@annamiticus) reported that in the first nine months of 2016, 18,670 tons of pangolin scales from 19 countries had been seized from smugglers, mostly in Hong Kong. And that's just the amount that was stopped; many more tons doubtless slipped through.
Despite the new CITES restrictions, trade in pangolins continues. In December, customs officials in Shanghai arrested 3 people who were attempting to smuggle over 3 tons of pangolin scales into China. That shipment alone represents 5,000 to 7,500 pangolins that were killed for their scales.
Next Saturday (18 February) is World Pangolin Day. Let's hope that the new CITES restrictions, and greater public awareness of the endangered pangolin, can save these gentle animals from extinction.
*note: perhaps it's not the "world's cutest mammal," but the pangolin is still worth saving.
A winner in last year's Wildlife Photographer of the Year addresses this issue. Would make a good billboard.
ReplyDeletehttp://www.nhm.ac.uk/visit/wpy/gallery/2016/images/the-wildlife-photojournalist-award-single-image/5118/the-pangolin-pit.html