Posted on 10/16/2019 10:12:12 AM PDT by Red Badger
White-bellied tree pangolins are being hunted illegally in large numbers in West Africa. Photo courtesy of Justin Miller/Pangolin Conservation
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ORLANDO, Fla., Oct. 16 (UPI) -- Researchers from Florida and Illinois are leading a global effort to understand and protect the world's most trafficked mammal -- the little-known pangolin.
Also called a scaly anteater, the cat-size pangolin is hunted and killed for its scales and meat in Africa and Southeast Asia. New research includes the so-called "Pango-Cam" attached to their backs to provide crucial information about the pangolin diet and territory.
Without quick efforts to understand how to breed the pangolin in captivity, many researchers fear it will be wiped out before many people even knew it existed -- leaving an unknown hole in its native ecosystem that could have unknown impact.
"We still know relatively little about them. When they get sick, we struggle to help them," said Matthew Shirley, a conservation scientist at Florida International University who is helping to coordinate the camera project. RELATED Singapore announces $48M seizure of ivory, pangolin scales
"We are trying to figure out how to replicate what they are eating and doing in the wild so they can be more successful in captivity," Shirley said.
Pango-Cam: The World's First Pangolin-Camera from Coral & Oak Studios on Vimeo.
One of the first released video clips shows the small animal climbing through trees and brush and eventually dining on weaver ants, which make hanging nests out of silk-like spiderwebs. RELATED Malaysia exposes pangolin trafficking ring with record bust
"Asian pangolins are on the verge of extinction," Shirley said. "We know virtually nothing about what they do, where they do it, what types of resources they need."
Shirley travels to West Africa regularly. He said poachers are burning out whole sections of forests, felling trees and using dogs to find pangolins.
"We can't do that to find animals. Every individual is precious, so we are attaching a variety of devices when we find a pangolin to record and transmit data," he said. RELATED Police break toilet to free trapped pangolin
The cameras are attached to the scales, which are made of substance similar to that of fingernails, Shirley said. Superstitious beliefs about the scales having medicinal properties are one of the main drivers of the animal's demise. Pangolins are unusual in an evolutionary sense; they are the only mammal that grows scales.
Shirley's work has been partly funded by a $25,000 grant from the Pangolin Consortium of zoos and institutions in the United States, while the camera project was funded in part by the National Geographic Society. Katie Schuler, head of production with Coral and Oak Studios, was a lead designer and researcher on the project.
Pangolins are being raised successfully for the first time by the Brookfield Zoo near Chicago and a handful of other zoos. Conservationists estimate 1 million pangolins have been snatched from the wild and trafficked in the past decade -- equivalent to one pangolin every five minutes.
"Pangolins are being confiscated from smugglers alive, but they are usually dehydrated and stressed, and survival rates were very low," said Bill Ziegler, senior vice president of animal programs at the Chicago Zoological Society, which manages the Brookfield Zoo. "We want to create a self-sustaining population in North America. The situation is dire."
All pangolin species have been listed as protected by a leading global organization, the International Union for Conservation of Nature, since 2016. The union and other conservation groups' estimates vary widely about how many pangolins are killed each year -- from 10,000 to millions.
The IUCN says demand for African pangolins is rising because the animals have been wiped out in Asia due to growing economic affluence in nations like China and Vietnam. The pangolin is seen as a status symbol there. Deforestation also is eliminating critical habitat.
National Geographic reported one of the largest seizures on record in 2018, in Nigeria, of 14,000 metric tons of stockpiled scales -- representing millions of animals.
Pangolins are rarely brought to the United States alive, but pangolin products are smuggled in, said Justin Miller, founder of the non-profit PangolinConservation.org in St. Augustine, Fla.
Miller said some people in Asian cultures are raised to believe myths about the pangolin beyond magical healing properties. Such beliefs include thinking the animals are raised on farms, their scales are cut off and regrow, and that they are numerous and not threatened -- all of which are false.
Miller, who has worked on public education efforts in Africa, said it is difficult to get people who are struggling to eat or survive to respect animal conservation.
The Brookfield Zoo is one of the only institutions where people can see pangolins on display occasionally. One of the trickiest things about keeping them is understanding how they breed, Ziegler said.
"Only a few years ago, people didn't even know the gestation period for pangolin," he said. "We know now it is from seven to eight months."
Other issues include show to keep them healthy, how to move them or immobilize them, and how to anesthetize them for surgery. Much time and money has been spent on finding out what they might eat besides live ants.
"We're trying to design care routines that will lead to getting them back out in the wild," Ziegler said.
Seized bags of dried pangolin scales are displayed during a press presentation at Kwai Chung Customhouse in Hong Kong in 2018. File Photo by Jerome Favre/EPA
I read that the dried scales can fetch $3,000 per kilo. And the scales can be bought under some Vietnamese health insurance plans.
Totally ridiculous,
with Viagra and Cialis freely available anywhere on this planet...........
I bet an crossbow arrow would go right through.............
“it is difficult to get people who are struggling to eat or survive to respect animal conservation.”
Where do these f’n people come from.
here on this property we always had fire ants. This year for some reason?, we are ever run with trillions of crazy ants. The good thing is they don’t bite but they are all over my cats food just as soon as she walks away from her bowl.
Yes, I’d rather have Crazy Ants!................
https://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-chat/3501964/posts
https://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-chat/3493746/posts
https://www.doyourownpestcontrol.com/crazy-ants.html
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paratrechina
Anteaters are so docile and slow it’s a wonder they have survived these millions of years..........
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