2018
DOI: 10.1016/j.gecco.2018.e00425
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Wildlife trade, captive breeding and the imminent extinction of a songbird

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Cited by 47 publications
(56 citation statements)
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“…However, the low-reproductive rates of preferred species (amazons and macaws) in captivity [6] make it difficult to supply enough individuals and at prices low enough to counteract poaching. Moreover, this activity is prone to fraud, as chicks of preferred species could be poached and sold as captive bred (see [84] for traded Asian songbirds). The genetic control of supposedly captive-bred individuals [85] requires great surveillance efforts, the development of genetic markers, and the availability of molecular laboratories [86], which are difficult to implement at a large scale in countries such as Colombia.…”
Section: Suggested Conservation Actionsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…However, the low-reproductive rates of preferred species (amazons and macaws) in captivity [6] make it difficult to supply enough individuals and at prices low enough to counteract poaching. Moreover, this activity is prone to fraud, as chicks of preferred species could be poached and sold as captive bred (see [84] for traded Asian songbirds). The genetic control of supposedly captive-bred individuals [85] requires great surveillance efforts, the development of genetic markers, and the availability of molecular laboratories [86], which are difficult to implement at a large scale in countries such as Colombia.…”
Section: Suggested Conservation Actionsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Rampant illegal wildlife trade, especially in Asia, has led to a rapid proliferation of such terminally endangered species over the last five to ten years. This has included numerous parrots and songbirds, along with many non-avian animals 25,[51][52][53] . Out of the three distinct subspecies of the Black-winged Myna, one (melanopterus) is practically extinct in the wild except for a small free-roaming flock inside a Javan wildlife park, while the other two subspecies each number < 200 individuals in the wild.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Birds are arguably one of the most popularly traded taxa, contributing as the most species rich and abundant class of wildlife traded legally based on records from 2006 to 2012 (Bush et al 2013). Traditionally, birds are kept as pets in many societies around the world but probably no where more so than in Southeast Asia (Lin 2005;Nijman et al 2018). However, not all of this trade is regulated and sustainable; over a third of bird species are impacted by overexploitation Reuter et al 2019).…”
Section: Q2mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Gunawan et al (2017) monitored 38 general wildlife trade and specialized birds of prey Facebook groups for 11 months over 2015, with about 90% of the offers originating from Facebook groups that were based in Java. Nijman Q20 and Nekaris (unpublished) monitored 15 bird markets in eight cities in Java from April 2014 to July 2019 (Nijman and Nekaris 2017;Nijman et al 2018) and recorded all birds of prey that were openly offered for sale. Despite differences in methodologies Q21 and survey efforts, we find similar links in species offered for sale, specially the migrant species which also fly over Thailand and mainland Southeast Asia such as the Japanese sparrowhawk Accipiter gularis and Chinese goshawk A. soloensis, as well as sales of nonmigratory species such as mountain hawk-eagles N. nipalensis which must have been imported from the mainland and Thailand are one of the closed source countries.…”
Section: Challengesmentioning
confidence: 99%