Global Ecology and Conservation (Jan 2015)

Unexpected and undesired conservation outcomes of wildlife trade bans—An emerging problem for stakeholders?

  • Diana S. Weber,
  • Tait Mandler,
  • Markus Dyck,
  • Peter J. Van Coeverden De Groot,
  • David S. Lee,
  • Douglas A. Clark

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.gecco.2015.01.006
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 3, no. C
pp. 389 – 400

Abstract

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CITES regulates international trade with the goal of preventing over-exploitation, thus the survival of species are not jeopardized from trade practices; however it has been used recently in nontrade conservation measures. As an example, the US proposed to up-list polar bears under CITES Appendix I, despite that the species did not conform to the biological criteria. Polar bears were listed as ‘threatened’ under US ESA in 2008, in response to loss of sea-ice and warming temperatures. In Nunavut, where most of Canada’s polar bears are harvested, the resulting trade ban did not decrease total harvest after the ESA listing but reduced US hunter participation and the proportion of quotas taken by sport hunters from specific populations. Consequently, the import ban impacted livelihoods of Arctic indigenous communities with negative conservation — reduced tolerance for dangerous fauna and affected local participation in shared management initiatives. The polar bear may be the exemplar of an emerging problem: the use of trade bans in place of action for non-trade threats, e.g., climate change. Conservation prospects for this species and other climate-sensitive wildlife will likely diminish if the increasing use of trade bans to combat non-trade issues cause stakeholders to lose faith in participatory management.

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