Perspectives on Conservation Impacts of the Global Primate Trade

IF 1.9 3区 生物学 Q1 ZOOLOGY International Journal of Primatology Pub Date : 2024-05-10 DOI:10.1007/s10764-024-00431-9
Gal Badihi, Daniel R. K. Nielsen, Paul A. Garber, Mike Gill, Lisa Jones-Engel, Angela M. Maldonado, Kerry M. Dore, Jennifer D. Cramer, Susan Lappan, Francine Dolins, Emerson Y. Sy, Agustin Fuentes, Vincent Nijman, Malene F. Hansen
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Abstract

The global trade in nonhuman primates represents a substantial threat to ecosystem health, human health, and primate conservation worldwide. Most of the primate trade involves trade for pet-keeping, consumption, or biomedical experimentation. We present an overview of international primate trade through five case studies; each describes a different facet of this trade. We draw on published scientific literature, media outlets, and open access datasets, including the CITES Trade Database to build these case studies. Case study 1 describes the role of introduced island populations of Macaca and Chlorocebus in trade for biomedical experimentation; case study 2 covers the global health threats posed by the primate trade, including zoonotic disease transmission once animals enter the trade pipeline; case study 3 addresses the ways that changing patterns of primate trade, from local markets to online, have increased the demand for primates as pets; case study 4 recognizes the role that local environmental activism can play in mitigating trade; and case study 5 shows variation between global regions in their contribution to the primate trade. We recommend greater oversight of primate trade, especially domestic trade within primate range countries, and real-time reporting to CITES to accurately track primate trade. Effective conservation-focused regulations that can minimise the negative effects of primate trade must be tailored to specific regions and species and require transparency, careful regulation, field research, and an understanding of the magnitude of this trade.

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透视全球灵长类动物贸易对保护工作的影响
全球非人灵长类动物贸易对生态系统健康、人类健康和全球灵长类动物保护构成了巨大威胁。灵长类动物贸易大多涉及宠物饲养、消费或生物医学实验。我们通过五个案例研究概述了国际灵长类动物贸易;每个案例都描述了这种贸易的不同方面。我们利用已发表的科学文献、媒体报道和开放访问的数据集(包括《濒危野生动植物种国际贸易公约》贸易数据库)来构建这些案例研究。案例研究 1 描述了引进的猕猴和绿头猕猴岛屿种群在生物医学实验贸易中的作用;案例研究 2 涉及灵长类动物贸易对全球健康的威胁,包括动物进入贸易渠道后的人畜共患疾病传播;案例研究 3 探讨了灵长类动物贸易模式的变化(从本地市场到网络)如何增加了将灵长类动物作为宠物的需求;案例研究 4 认识到本地环保活动在减少贸易方面可以发挥的作用;案例研究 5 显示了全球不同地区对灵长类动物贸易贡献的差异。我们建议加强对灵长类动物贸易的监督,特别是灵长类动物分布国的国内贸易,并实时向《濒危野生动植物种国际贸易公约》报告,以准确跟踪灵长类动物贸易。有效的、以保护为重点的、能最大限度减少灵长类动物贸易负面影响的法规必须适合特定地区和物种,并且需要透明度、谨慎监管、实地研究以及对灵长类动物贸易规模的了解。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
4.10
自引率
16.00%
发文量
68
审稿时长
6-12 weeks
期刊介绍: The International Journal of Primatology is a multidisciplinary forum devoted to the dissemination of current research in fundamental primatology. Publishing peer-reviewed, high-quality original articles which feature primates, the journal gathers laboratory and field studies from such diverse disciplines as anthropology, anatomy, ecology, ethology, paleontology, psychology, sociology, and zoology.
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