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1.
Conserv Biol ; 25(6): 1220-1228, 2011 Dec.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21967092

RESUMO

Spatially extensive patterns of bushmeat extraction (and the processes underlying these patterns) have not been explored. We used data from a large sample (n= 87) of bushmeat trading points in urban and rural localities in Nigeria and Cameroon to explore extraction patterns at a regional level. In 7,594 sample days, we observed 61,267 transactions involving whole carcasses. Rural and urban trading points differed in species for sale and in meat condition (fresh or smoked). Carcass price was principally associated with body mass, with little evidence that taxonomic group (primate, rodent, ungulate, or mammalian carnivore) affected price. Moreover, meat condition was not consistently associated with price. However, some individual species were more expensive throughout the region than would be expected for their size. Prices were weakly positively correlated with human settlement size and were highest in urban areas. Supply did not increase proportionally as human settlement size increased, such that per capita supply was significantly lower in urban centers than in rural areas. Policy options, including banning hunting of more vulnerable species (those that have low reproductive rates), may help to conserve some species consumed as bushmeat because carcass prices indicate that faster breeding, and therefore the more sustainable species, may be substituted and readily accepted by consumers.


Resumen: Los patrones espacialmente extensivos de extracción de carne silvestre (y los procesos relacionados con esos patrones) no han sido explorados. Utilizamos datos de una muestra grande (n =87) de puntos de venta de carne silvestre en localidades urbanas y rurales en Nigeria y Camerún para explorar los patrones de extracción a nivel regional. En 7,594 días de muestreo observamos 61,267 transacciones involucrando cuerpos completos. Los puntos de venta rurales y urbanos difirieron en especies en venta y condición de la carne (fresca o ahumada). El precio del cuerpo se asoció principalmente con la masa corporal, con poca evidencia de que el grupo taxonómico (primate, roedor, ungulado o mamífero carnívoro) afectara el precio. Mas aun, la condición de la carne no se asoció consistentemente con el precio. Sin embargo, algunas especies individuales en la región fueron más caras de lo esperado por su tamaño. Los precios se correlacionaron positiva y débilmente con el tamaño del asentamiento humano y fueron más altos en áreas urbanas. La oferta no incrementó proporcionalmente a medida que incrementó el tamaño del asentamiento, tanto que la oferta per cápita fue significativamente menor en centros urbanos que en áreas urbanas. Opciones de políticas, incluyendo la prohibición de la caza de especies más vulnerables (aquellas que tienen bajas tasas reproductivas), pueden ayudar a conservar algunas especies consumidas como carne silvestre porque los precios indican que especies de reproducción más rápida, y por lo tanto más sustentables, pueden ser sustituidas y aceptadas de buena gana por los consumidores.


Assuntos
Comércio , Conservação dos Recursos Naturais , Carne/economia , Animais , Tamanho Corporal , Camarões , Mamíferos/anatomia & histologia , Nigéria
2.
PLoS One ; 6(7): e21243, 2011.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21799733

RESUMO

Farming of animals and plants has recently been considered not merely as a more efficient and plentiful supply of their products but also as a means of protecting wild populations from that trade. Amongst these nascent farming products might be listed bear bile. Bear bile has been exploited by traditional Chinese medicinalists for millennia. Since the 1980s consumers have had the options of: illegal wild gall bladders, bile extracted from caged live bears or the acid synthesised chemically. Despite these alternatives bears continue to be harvested from the wild. In this paper we use stated preference techniques using a random sample of the Chinese population to estimate demand functions for wild bear bile with and without competition from farmed bear bile. We find a willingness to pay considerably more for wild bear bile than farmed. Wild bear bile has low own price elasticity and cross price elasticity with farmed bear bile. The ability of farmed bear bile to reduce demand for wild bear bile is at best limited and, at prevailing prices, may be close to zero or have the opposite effect. The demand functions estimated suggest that the own price elasticity of wild bear bile is lower when competing with farmed bear bile than when it is the only option available. This means that the incumbent product may actually sell more items at a higher price when competing than when alone in the market. This finding may be of broader interest to behavioural economists as we argue that one explanation may be that as product choice increases price has less impact on decision making. For the wildlife farming debate this indicates that at some prices the introduction of farmed competition might increase the demand for the wild product.


Assuntos
Ácidos e Sais Biliares , Medicina Tradicional Chinesa , Preferência do Paciente/estatística & dados numéricos , Ursidae , Animais , China , Conservação dos Recursos Naturais , Feminino , Renda/estatística & dados numéricos , Modelos Lineares , Masculino
3.
Conserv Biol ; 24(6): 1479-87, 2010 Dec.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20560999

RESUMO

The unit of trade in ecosystem services is usually the use of a proportion of the parcels of land associated with a given service. Valuing small changes in the provision of an ecosystem service presents obstacles, particularly when the service provides non-use benefits, as is the case with conservation of most plants and animals. Quantifying non-use values requires stated-preference valuations. Stated-preference valuations can provide estimates of the public's willingness to pay for a broad conservation goal. Nevertheless, stated-preference valuations can be expensive and do not produce consistent measures for varying levels of provision of a service. Additionally, the unit of trade, land use, is not always linearly related to the level of ecosystem services the land might provide. To overcome these obstacles, we developed a method to estimate the value of a marginal change in the provision of a non-use ecosystem service--in this case conservation of plants or animals associated with a given land-cover type. Our method serves as a tool for calculating transferable valuations of small changes in the provision of ecosystem services relative to the existing provision. Valuation is achieved through stated-preference investigations, calculation of a unit value for a parcel of land, and the weighting of this parcel by its ability to provide the desired ecosystem service and its effect on the ability of the surrounding land parcels to provide the desired service. We used the water vole (Arvicola terrestris) as a case study to illustrate the method. The average present value of a meter of water vole habitat was estimated at UK £ 12, but the marginal value of a meter (based on our methods) could range between £ 0 and £ 40 or more.


Assuntos
Arvicolinae , Conservação dos Recursos Naturais/métodos , Ecossistema , Animais , Biodiversidade
4.
PLoS One ; 3(7): e2544, 2008 Jul 02.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18596926

RESUMO

A heated debate has recently emerged between tiger farmers and conservationists about the potential consequences of lifting the ban on trade in farmed tiger products in China. This debate has caused unfounded speculation about the extent of the potential market for tiger products. To fill this knowledge gap, we surveyed 1880 residents from a total of six Chinese cities to understand Urban Chinese tiger consumption behavior, knowledge of trade issues and attitudes towards tiger conservation. We found that 43% of respondents had consumed some product alleged to contain tiger parts. Within this user-group, 71% said that they preferred wild products over farmed ones. The two predominant products used were tiger bone plasters (38%) and tiger bone wine (6.4%). 88% of respondents knew that it was illegal to buy or sell tiger products, and 93% agreed that a ban in trade of tiger parts was necessary to conserve wild tigers. These results indicate that while Urban Chinese people are generally supportive of tiger conservation, there is a huge residual demand for tiger products that could resurge if the ban on trade in tiger parts is lifted in China. We suspect that the current supply of the market is predominantly met by fakes or substitutes branded as tiger medicines, but not listing tiger as an ingredient. We suggest that the Traditional Chinese Medicine community should consider re-branding these products as bone-healing medicines in order to reduce the residual demand for real tiger parts over the long-term. The lifting of the current ban on trade in farmed tiger parts may cause a surge in demand for wild tiger parts that consumers say are better. Because of the low input costs associated with poaching, wild-sourced parts would consistently undercut the prices of farmed tigers that could easily be laundered on a legal market. We therefore recommend that the Chinese authorities maintain the ban on trade in tiger parts, and work to improve the enforcement of the existing ban.


Assuntos
Conservação dos Recursos Naturais , Opinião Pública , Tigres , Animais , Animais Selvagens , China , Extinção Biológica
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