John R. Platt, The
Revelator /
Center for
Biological Diversity
July 2018
Wildlife crime is organized crime, not an ‘animal rights’ issue.
Pangolin
At first glance rhinos, pangolins and jaguars don’t seem to have much in
common.
But there are a few things that link them. For one thing, they’re all
targets of poachers and smugglers, who traffic in their body parts and
threaten the species with extinction.
For another, all three species have benefitted from the hard work of Rhishja
Cota, founder of the wildlife advocacy organization Annamiticus (named after
the extinct Vietnamese Javan rhino).
From her home base in Tucson, Ariz., Cota travels around the world in her
quest to protect these and other species from wildlife trafficking. She’s
pushed for improved enforcement of existing laws and helped to educate the
public about issues related to imperiled species. Cota has also authored
hundreds of articles about conservation, as well as a special field guide to
help customs agents and other enforcement issues identify pangolins and
their body parts, which have become the most heavily trafficked animals in
the world.
As Cota prepared to leave for Geneva for this month’s meeting of the Animals
Committee of the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of
Wild Fauna and Flora (CITES), she spoke with us about her latest efforts to
protect imperiled wildlife and what the world needs to do better to prevent
these species from falling into extinction.
You organize the annual World Pangolin Day. How far do you feel
pangolin awareness has come since you launched this in 2012, and how much
further do we need to go?
I have a soft spot for the underdog and so launching World Pangolin Day has
been one of the most rewarding projects of my wildlife career.
the askIt is fantastic to see that World Pangolin Day has grown into a
global event which is now recognized by pangolin people all over the world —
local on-the-ground conservation programs, schools, artists, big
international NGOs , as well as high-profile institutions such as the United
Nations (CITES), USAID and the IUCN.
Pangolins are listed on CITES Appendix I, which bans international trade,
and of course are protected by national laws throughout their range. In my
opinion, providing education and training to help “first responders” —
law-enforcement and customs officers — work collaboratively is critical for
protecting pangolins. Additionally, the courts need to treat wildlife crime
cases with the utmost seriousness. Wildlife crime is organized crime, not an
“animal rights” issue.
You also recently launched plans for World Jaguar Day, to be held
June 11, 2019. What inspired this, and what do you hope to accomplish in the
nearly one-year lead-up to the first event?
I have been following the global wildlife trafficking crisis for about 10
years now. I can’t say I was at all surprised when illegal trade in jaguar
teeth and bones surfaced and was linked to the famously insatiable Chinese
demand for big cat body parts.
As a resident of the Tucson, Arizona, area, the jaguars in my backyard. I
believe if we shine the spotlight on the jaguar — let the rest of the world
know that the biggest cat in the Americas is facing the same threat as
tigers and lions and leopards — maybe we can get ahead of the situation
before it gets out of control, like it has with tigers.
Plans for the 2019 launch of World Jaguar Day were hatched in April of this
year, actually. Then in May, I attended the Madrean Conference here in
Tucson and spent a day immersed in the state of the jaguar.
What really struck me is the approach of treating jaguars throughout their
range as one population — including the United States. We need to stop
saying “a few remnant individuals in the U.S.” According to the jaguar
experts at the Madrean Conference, where there is one male jaguar, there is
a female jaguar.
In the lead-up to World Jaguar Day, we will be profiling innovative jaguar
conservation programs and educating the public and the media about jaguar
issues. We will be digging into the unsavory issue of jaguar trade and
publishing our findings.
We’re looking forward to providing a launching pad for jaguar
conservationists, wildlife enthusiasts, big-cat fanatics, NGOs, zoos,
schools, the private sector and individuals to celebrate the iconic jaguar.
What other species are you focusing on at the moment?
Like I said, I go for the underdog and as such, I’m taking a very close look
at opportunities to help freshwater turtles and tortoises.
Looking at the broad world of wildlife trafficking, what progress or
potential progress excites you the most lately?
Wildlife crime needs to be dealt with on par with other types of organized
crime. I think that is starting to happen. Meaningful jail sentences are
handed down more frequently than say five years ago, and I know that there
are multiple law-enforcement training initiatives happening in Asia and
Africa that are focused on wildlife crime.
What do you wish more people understood about the impacts of trade
in wild species?
Despite all the evidence to the contrary, the media still runs with stories
about “legal trade will save the species” and “farming wildlife to meet
demand” and “selling stockpiles to fund conservation” without doing proper
research, particularly on the law-enforcement challenges. The notion of
supplying captive-bred species to commercial markets has been proven time
and again to have a disastrous effect on wild populations, including tigers,
bears, crocodiles and ivory stockpiles, to name just a few disasters. There
is an abundance of literature on this topic, and certainly no shortage of
wildlife trade policy experts — real experts, not wildlife breeders or
pro-trade advocates — available for interviews.
In my opinion, when media outlets publish information that suggests legal
trade, wildlife farming or selling stockpiles are options for saving
wildlife, it can harm the efforts of legitimate wildlife conservation
organizations. When we are dealing with something as delicate and finite as
wildlife, media and communications professionals should strive to educate
the public, not confuse or hoodwink for the sake of a headline or more
clicks.
John R. Platt is the editor of The Revelator. An award-winning environmental journalist, his work has appeared in Scientific American, Audubon, Motherboard, and numerous other magazines and publications. His “Extinction Countdown” column has run continuously since 2004 and has covered news and science related to more than 1,000 endangered species. He is a member of the Society of Environmental Journalists and the National Association of Science Writers. John lives on the outskirts of Portland, Ore., where he finds himself surrounded by animals and cartoonists.