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SOME STRATEGIES FOR THE CONTROL OF ILLEGAL TRADE
AND TRAFFICKING IN ENDANGERED SPECIES OF FAUNA AND FLORA
IN WEST AND CENTRAL AFRICA
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Illegal trade and trafficking in endangered species
of fauna and flora is an ugly trend that has been fueled
by increasing demands for exotic species of plants and
animals worldwide. The increasing urge to get rich quick
by many and decline in economic fortunes of west and
central African nations has not helped matters. Therefore,
quite a number of people living below the poverty line
can easily be enticed to do a number of illegal things
to survive. Nigerians as well as foreigners partake
in these trades without fear especially as our wildlife
laws are too weak, ambiguous, contradictory or obsolete.
For these reasons and more, mammals, reptiles, birds,
amphibians, fishes, insects and plants as well as their
parts and products have been illegally exported from
the region for many years.
The current preponderance of New Government Zoos, Bird
Parks, Private Wildlife Sanctuaries, Private Animal
Laboratories, Private Zoos and collections etc in the
developed world has fueled the international demands
for endangered species of animals and even plants in
recent times.
In these direction, these nations loses enormous foreign
exchange and stand a chance of loosing some species
to extinction apart from loosing credibility as CITES
signatory nations. More research and monitoring; review
and updating of wildlife legislations, law enforcement,
promotions of transboundary cooperation as well as provision
of alternatives to bush meat, employment and social
security are recommended.
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CURRENT TRENDS IN ENDANGERED SPECIES TRAFFICKING
IN THE REGION
The Southeastern Corner of Nigeria and southwestern
Cameroon all the way to Gabon, Central Africa as far
as the Congo is reputed as being the last strong hold
of the tropical rainforests ecosystem and as such one
of the most important as far as biological diversity
is concerned in the sub-region.
Thus, it is regarded as a ‘Biodiversity Hotspot’
for the tropical African sub-region and part of the
continuous Guinean forests zone. The area contains an
array of endangered and endemic species of Fauna and
Flora, which are highly priced in the international
Pet trade markets. Apart from the protected areas within
the region, other forests are also known to habour a
number of endangered and endemic species of fauna and
flora. Some of these species command great prices in
hard currencies. This is because, the rarer the species,
the harder it is to obtain a specimen and the greater
the demand for it in zoos, sanctuaries, laboratories
and captive breeding facilities. These very rare species
are among the critically endangered, endangered and
threatened taxa. Among the faunal classes, Great Apes
such as Gorillas, Chimpanzees and Bonobos as well as
Primates eg Mandrills, Drills, Guenons, Mangabeys, Colobus
monkeys and Prosimians, etc., are highly exploited in
their natural habitats. Other charismatic mammalian
species such as the big Cats are also traded for various
reasons including their peculiar attributes. Birds such
as Psitacines (parrots, macaws, etc), Cranes and Eagles
are sold mostly for their talking or ability to mimic
humans and plumes, while Reptiles such as snakes are
traded for traditional, cultural and scientific purposes
as well as their skins and to some extent as bush meat.
It is now possible to see just nearly any species in
trade.
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