Asia's economic growth and its impact on Indonesia's tigers

Illegal wildlife trade represents a major threat to biodiversity. Recent wildlife consumption trends across Asia have shown shifts in preference towards new species, such as Sunda pangolin, and increased volumes of consumption for longer-traded species, such as tiger. These trends are widely thought...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Linkie, M, Martyr, D, Harihar, A, Mardiah, S, Hodgetts, T, Risdianto, D, Subchaan, M, Macdonald, D
Format: Journal article
Published: Elsevier 2018
_version_ 1826303246089584640
author Linkie, M
Martyr, D
Harihar, A
Mardiah, S
Hodgetts, T
Risdianto, D
Subchaan, M
Macdonald, D
author_facet Linkie, M
Martyr, D
Harihar, A
Mardiah, S
Hodgetts, T
Risdianto, D
Subchaan, M
Macdonald, D
author_sort Linkie, M
collection OXFORD
description Illegal wildlife trade represents a major threat to biodiversity. Recent wildlife consumption trends across Asia have shown shifts in preference towards new species, such as Sunda pangolin, and increased volumes of consumption for longer-traded species, such as tiger. These trends are widely thought to be a result of the higher levels of wealth generated from the impressive economic growth experienced across Asia. This raises important questions regarding the role that economic growth plays as a driver of poaching on source populations of highly-prized species. As a first step to answering these, we investigate trade dynamics related to the poaching of tigers and their principal prey using a long-term biological and economic data set. The fluctuating poaching patterns recorded for tiger prey, which are locally consumed for their meat, showed no association with rising domestic beef prices, the most likely substitutable protein source. However for tiger, annual poaching rates were positively and significantly correlated with changes in local tiger skin prices that, in turn, were closely correlated with annual GDP changes in the key consumer countries. Our preliminary analysis raises further questions around the causal pathways through which rising affluence and extinction risk are linked; a question that should be posed for a wide set of species. Thus, the strong regional leadership that has enabled high economic growth across Asia and lifted hundreds of millions of people out of poverty should now be urgently directed to tackling illegal wildlife trade and, as a priority, to closing domestic and international trafficking routes.
first_indexed 2024-03-07T05:59:44Z
format Journal article
id oxford-uuid:ebc0702a-3e83-4d90-94cb-f01fbcb9f659
institution University of Oxford
last_indexed 2024-03-07T05:59:44Z
publishDate 2018
publisher Elsevier
record_format dspace
spelling oxford-uuid:ebc0702a-3e83-4d90-94cb-f01fbcb9f6592022-03-27T11:12:18ZAsia's economic growth and its impact on Indonesia's tigersJournal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:ebc0702a-3e83-4d90-94cb-f01fbcb9f659Symplectic Elements at OxfordElsevier2018Linkie, MMartyr, DHarihar, AMardiah, SHodgetts, TRisdianto, DSubchaan, MMacdonald, DIllegal wildlife trade represents a major threat to biodiversity. Recent wildlife consumption trends across Asia have shown shifts in preference towards new species, such as Sunda pangolin, and increased volumes of consumption for longer-traded species, such as tiger. These trends are widely thought to be a result of the higher levels of wealth generated from the impressive economic growth experienced across Asia. This raises important questions regarding the role that economic growth plays as a driver of poaching on source populations of highly-prized species. As a first step to answering these, we investigate trade dynamics related to the poaching of tigers and their principal prey using a long-term biological and economic data set. The fluctuating poaching patterns recorded for tiger prey, which are locally consumed for their meat, showed no association with rising domestic beef prices, the most likely substitutable protein source. However for tiger, annual poaching rates were positively and significantly correlated with changes in local tiger skin prices that, in turn, were closely correlated with annual GDP changes in the key consumer countries. Our preliminary analysis raises further questions around the causal pathways through which rising affluence and extinction risk are linked; a question that should be posed for a wide set of species. Thus, the strong regional leadership that has enabled high economic growth across Asia and lifted hundreds of millions of people out of poverty should now be urgently directed to tackling illegal wildlife trade and, as a priority, to closing domestic and international trafficking routes.
spellingShingle Linkie, M
Martyr, D
Harihar, A
Mardiah, S
Hodgetts, T
Risdianto, D
Subchaan, M
Macdonald, D
Asia's economic growth and its impact on Indonesia's tigers
title Asia's economic growth and its impact on Indonesia's tigers
title_full Asia's economic growth and its impact on Indonesia's tigers
title_fullStr Asia's economic growth and its impact on Indonesia's tigers
title_full_unstemmed Asia's economic growth and its impact on Indonesia's tigers
title_short Asia's economic growth and its impact on Indonesia's tigers
title_sort asia s economic growth and its impact on indonesia s tigers
work_keys_str_mv AT linkiem asiaseconomicgrowthanditsimpactonindonesiastigers
AT martyrd asiaseconomicgrowthanditsimpactonindonesiastigers
AT harihara asiaseconomicgrowthanditsimpactonindonesiastigers
AT mardiahs asiaseconomicgrowthanditsimpactonindonesiastigers
AT hodgettst asiaseconomicgrowthanditsimpactonindonesiastigers
AT risdiantod asiaseconomicgrowthanditsimpactonindonesiastigers
AT subchaanm asiaseconomicgrowthanditsimpactonindonesiastigers
AT macdonaldd asiaseconomicgrowthanditsimpactonindonesiastigers