E-commerce promotes trade in invasive turtles in China
Habitats in China are suited to many invasive alien turtle species. Consequently, raising turtles in aquaculture facilities, and the trade in turtles this supplies, poses risks to wetland habitats and ecological cascades when exotic turtles escape or are released deliberately. Online trade (e-commer...
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Cambridge University Press
2020
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author | Liu, S Newman, C Buesching, C Macdonald, D Zhang, Y Zhang, K Li, F Zhou, Z |
author_facet | Liu, S Newman, C Buesching, C Macdonald, D Zhang, Y Zhang, K Li, F Zhou, Z |
author_sort | Liu, S |
collection | OXFORD |
description | Habitats in China are suited to many invasive alien turtle species. Consequently, raising turtles in aquaculture facilities, and the trade in turtles this supplies, poses risks to wetland habitats and ecological cascades when exotic turtles escape or are released deliberately. Online trade (e-commerce) is making an increasing contribution to turtle sales in China, seemingly driving greater demand and so potentially exacerbating these risks. Here we document the scale and spatial pattern of online sales of non-native turtles over 90 days via China’s Taobao.com e-commerce site. Recorded sales were biased toward the ecologically sensitive middle and lower Yangtze-river-basin for both North American slider (Trachemys scripta elegans; >840,000 individuals - 82.35% in middle and lower Yangtze-river-basin) and snapping turtles (Chelydridae spp.; >100,000 individuals - 68.26% in middle and lower Yangtze-river-basin). Concurrently, over 2008-2018, we found 104 mentions of feral turtle issues listed on Baidu News, where, among the 53 prefectures mentioned, issues with invasive populations were also focused predominantly in the middle and lower Yangtze-river-basin. Although circumstantial, this association implies that the substantial online sale of alien turtles is having detrimental effects in China’s Yangtze-river-basin. It is thus important to safeguard these wetland habitats of global biodiversity importance through developing better policies detecting and regulating invasive alien turtle issues in the future and through warning consumers about the ecological hazard their purchases risk. |
first_indexed | 2024-03-06T22:07:08Z |
format | Journal article |
id | oxford-uuid:508bc6f4-7904-467a-ade9-1353c976a4f6 |
institution | University of Oxford |
last_indexed | 2024-03-06T22:07:08Z |
publishDate | 2020 |
publisher | Cambridge University Press |
record_format | dspace |
spelling | oxford-uuid:508bc6f4-7904-467a-ade9-1353c976a4f62022-03-26T16:14:16ZE-commerce promotes trade in invasive turtles in ChinaJournal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:508bc6f4-7904-467a-ade9-1353c976a4f6Symplectic Elements at OxfordCambridge University Press2020Liu, SNewman, CBuesching, CMacdonald, DZhang, YZhang, KLi, FZhou, ZHabitats in China are suited to many invasive alien turtle species. Consequently, raising turtles in aquaculture facilities, and the trade in turtles this supplies, poses risks to wetland habitats and ecological cascades when exotic turtles escape or are released deliberately. Online trade (e-commerce) is making an increasing contribution to turtle sales in China, seemingly driving greater demand and so potentially exacerbating these risks. Here we document the scale and spatial pattern of online sales of non-native turtles over 90 days via China’s Taobao.com e-commerce site. Recorded sales were biased toward the ecologically sensitive middle and lower Yangtze-river-basin for both North American slider (Trachemys scripta elegans; >840,000 individuals - 82.35% in middle and lower Yangtze-river-basin) and snapping turtles (Chelydridae spp.; >100,000 individuals - 68.26% in middle and lower Yangtze-river-basin). Concurrently, over 2008-2018, we found 104 mentions of feral turtle issues listed on Baidu News, where, among the 53 prefectures mentioned, issues with invasive populations were also focused predominantly in the middle and lower Yangtze-river-basin. Although circumstantial, this association implies that the substantial online sale of alien turtles is having detrimental effects in China’s Yangtze-river-basin. It is thus important to safeguard these wetland habitats of global biodiversity importance through developing better policies detecting and regulating invasive alien turtle issues in the future and through warning consumers about the ecological hazard their purchases risk. |
spellingShingle | Liu, S Newman, C Buesching, C Macdonald, D Zhang, Y Zhang, K Li, F Zhou, Z E-commerce promotes trade in invasive turtles in China |
title | E-commerce promotes trade in invasive turtles in China |
title_full | E-commerce promotes trade in invasive turtles in China |
title_fullStr | E-commerce promotes trade in invasive turtles in China |
title_full_unstemmed | E-commerce promotes trade in invasive turtles in China |
title_short | E-commerce promotes trade in invasive turtles in China |
title_sort | e commerce promotes trade in invasive turtles in china |
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