Nature Communications (Aug 2024)

Early warning of trends in commercial wildlife trade through novel machine-learning analysis of patent filing

  • A. Hinsley,
  • D. W. S. Challender,
  • S. Masters,
  • D. W. Macdonald,
  • E. J. Milner-Gulland,
  • J. Fraser,
  • J. Wright

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-024-49688-x
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 1
pp. 1 – 10

Abstract

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Abstract Unsustainable wildlife trade imperils thousands of species, but efforts to identify and reduce these threats are hampered by rapidly evolving commercial markets. Businesses trading wildlife-derived products innovate to remain competitive, and the patents they file to protect their innovations also provide an early-warning of market shifts. Here, we develop a novel machine-learning approach to analyse patent-filing trends and apply it to patents filed from 1970-2020 related to six traded taxa that vary in trade legality, threat level, and use type: rhinoceroses, pangolins, bears, sturgeon, horseshoe crabs, and caterpillar fungus. We found 27,308 patents, showing 130% per-year increases, compared to a background rate of 104%. Innovation led to diversification, including new fertilizer products using illegal-to-trade rhinoceros horn, and novel farming methods for pangolins. Stricter regulation did not generally correlate with reduced patenting. Patents reveal how wildlife-related businesses predict, adapt to, and create market shifts, providing data to underpin proactive wildlife-trade management approaches.