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Viagra Swells Scarce Animal Count
Environment News Service ^
| November 7, 2002
| Stewart Taggart
Posted on 11/09/2002 1:27:07 PM PST by Ernest_at_the_Beach
SYDNEY, Australia, November 7, 2002 (ENS) - Men definitely get a lift from the anti-impotence drug Viagra. Now there is evidence that threatened animal species may also benefit, say two researchers.
Since the blockbuster treatment went on sale in 1998, there has been a marked drop in global demand for animal products used in traditional Chinese medicine - like Alaskan reindeer antler velvet and Canadian seal penises.

"The evidence is still merely suggestive," says Bill von Hippel, a psychology professor at the University of New South Wales in Australia. "But it'll be nice if it turns out to be true." From 1997 to 1998, sales of Alaskan reindeer antler velvet, used as an anti-impotence drug in traditional Chinese medicine, dropped 72 percent worldwide. While sales had been down since 1990, the 1997-98 drop was the biggest since record keeping began in 1972, says von Hippel.
Meanwhile, sales of the penises of Canadian hooded and harp seals fell by half between 1996 and 1998, and to near zero in 2000, he added.
As part of their research, von Hippel and his brother, Frank, a biologist at the University of Alaska, studied trade data on legally harvested species used for impotence treatment in traditional Chinese medicine before and after Viagra went on sale. They limited their focus to trade in animal parts selling for more than $8 to $10 - the price per pill for Viagra.

Asian medicinal products, such as these displayed in this Hong Kong market, often make use of animal parts. (Photo courtesy Hawk)
"Because market forces are driving the overcollection of and subsequent threat to some species, the elimination of these market forces may prove to be the most effective conservation solution," the brothers wrote in a paper published in the September issue of the journal "Environmental Conservation." While they admit the drop in demand could have been caused in part by other factors - such as the East Asian economic crisis, lower prices for Canadian seal pelts and meat, and reductions in a Canadian fuel subsidy - the von Hippel brothers believe a statistical correlation exists.
If confirmed by additional research, Viagra's commercial success could mean good news for a host of other wild animals, such as pipefish, seahorses, sea cucumbers and North American elk, also sought for use in impotence treatments. While these animal parts may have a long history of use in Chinese folk medicine, none has proven effective under Western standards of double-blind testing with placebos as a control group, Bill von Hippel says.
One reason the brothers selected Viagra for study was that its effects are undeniable.
"While there are many Western medicines that do much the same thing as Chinese traditional medicines, East Asians are typically suspicious of Western medical products," Frank von Hippel says. "What's different about Viagra is that its effect is so immediate and visible."
Since completing their trade data study, the brothers have interviewed 100 Hong Kong apothecaries about demand for traditional remedies since Viagra came on the market. While that research is not complete, early indications show the results support their first study's conclusions, Bill von Hippel says. Later, the brothers hope to conduct a survey of users of traditional Chinese medicines.

Viagra tablets (Photo credit unknown)
"If apothecary and user-level data confirm the trade data, we could have a really good story linking Viagra and conservation," von Hippel says. However, he cautions, the good news may only go so far. Many Asians remain deeply committed to traditional medicines, using Western medicine only for highly specific ailments. Jill Robinson, founder and CEO of the Hong Kong-based Animals Asia Foundation, says the von Hippels' work mirrors her organization's findings.
"While Viagra has enormous potential, the transition [away from using animal parts] is clearly not happening quickly enough - and the reduction in demand still remains very small," she says. For instance, blackmarket versions of Viagra for sale in China often contain animal parts as a "booster," she says.
What's more, different parts of the same animal can be used for different treatments, which also could limit the overall benefits to threatened species from an individual wonder drug such as Viagra.
{Published in cooperation with Wired News}
TOPICS: Culture/Society; Extended News; Foreign Affairs; Miscellaneous; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: enviornmental; viagra
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To: Ernest_at_the_Beach
I heard a truck load of viagra had been stolen. The police bulletin said, police were looking for a gang of hardend criminals.
Forgive me, I couldn't help myself. tee hee
2
posted on
11/09/2002 1:38:54 PM PST
by
Ditter
To: Ditter
ROFL!
To: Ernest_at_the_Beach
This will be a tough one for the Greens. Is it still OK to hate pharmaceutical companies that price their products high (in order to fund future research)? I mean, the research that they've funded is now helping to save endangered species. What a dilemma!
To: Ernest_at_the_Beach
Another title for this post could have been:
"Viagra Swells Scarce Animals (Males, Of Course)"
To: Ernest_at_the_Beach
When I read the title I thought they were giving this stuff to scarce animals to get them, Ahem!, interested. LOL
6
posted on
11/09/2002 2:32:46 PM PST
by
Arkie2
To: Lurking2Long
Actually, there are several other things this drug can address, to benefit women in ways other than 'by' her mate.
7
posted on
11/09/2002 2:37:19 PM PST
by
MHGinTN
To: Travis McGee
"seal penises. "
My sympathy.
8
posted on
11/09/2002 3:11:30 PM PST
by
Rebelbase
To: Ditter
Needed the smile - thanks
9
posted on
11/09/2002 3:14:51 PM PST
by
SarahW
To: Ernest_at_the_Beach
"Canadian seal penises"
It's one thing to say someone is "hung like a horse",
but quite less sugggestive to say he is "hung like a Canadian seal"
10
posted on
11/09/2002 3:17:39 PM PST
by
APBaer
To: APBaer
it might have the something to do with beach.
11
posted on
11/09/2002 3:59:22 PM PST
by
ckilmer
To: Ernest_at_the_Beach
Drop in the demand for Canadian seal penises and McDonalds shutting down restaurants worldwide.....Need I say more?:^)
12
posted on
11/09/2002 4:06:40 PM PST
by
scouse
To: Rebelbase
No skin off my
never mind.
To: RadioAstronomer; longshadow; PatrickHenry
The benefits of this drug continue to impress...
14
posted on
11/09/2002 5:03:26 PM PST
by
Aracelis
To: Piltdown_Woman
My dear, would you like to assist me in my noble work of saving the Canadian seal?
To: PatrickHenry
Yes, we must save the seals! :-)
16
posted on
11/09/2002 5:38:55 PM PST
by
Aracelis
To: Ditter
I heard a truck load of viagra had been stolen. The police bulletin said, police were looking for a gang of hardend criminals.Police are rising to the occasion, but said this will be a hard act to follow when they bust this nut.
To: Arkie2
When I read the title I thought they were giving this stuff to scarce animals to get them, Ahem!, interested. LOL I believe Viagra is being tried by zoos to encourage endangered mammals (rare tigers, etc.) to breed. I don't know where I saw it, or whether I would give it a lot of credibility, since if baby animals is all they want then artificial insemination can do the same thing.
To: Ernest_at_the_Beach
I only did a search, but appears the giant panda isn't mentioned.
Now there is one species that could use something like Viagra.
I remember seeing on one documentary that one of the male pandas brought in
to help a lady panda (to make little pandas, of course) was so uninterested
that the poor female (in heat) started hitting and biting in him in a futile bid
for attention.
It was sad and sort of funny at the same time...
I don't think this was a gay male panda thing...I think the show said that such
dis-interest (or ineptness) is pretty common in these attempts to breed pandas in zoos.
19
posted on
11/09/2002 7:53:56 PM PST
by
VOA
To: Ernest_at_the_Beach
Its certainly done wonders for the world's population of One-Eyed Trouser Snakes.
20
posted on
11/09/2002 7:55:28 PM PST
by
strela
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