Typologies of urban wildlife traffickers and sellers

Urban wildmeat consumption can contribute to significant declines in wildlife populations, ecosystem function, and food insecurity security. Describing types of individuals involved in illegal urban wildmeat trafficking can help distinguish ordinary citizens from members of criminal organizations an...

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Main Authors: Meredith L. Gore, Robert Mwinyihali, Luc Mayet, Gavinet Duclair Makaya Baku-Bumb, Christian Plowman, Michelle Wieland
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2021-06-01
Series:Global Ecology and Conservation
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2351989421001074
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spelling doaj-16223ddddd594d74a9192957940215db2021-05-28T05:02:16ZengElsevierGlobal Ecology and Conservation2351-98942021-06-0127e01557Typologies of urban wildlife traffickers and sellersMeredith L. Gore0Robert Mwinyihali1Luc Mayet2Gavinet Duclair Makaya Baku-Bumb3Christian Plowman4Michelle Wieland5Department of Geographical Sciences, 2181 LeFrak Hall, 7251 Preinkert Drive, College Park, MD 20742, USA; Corresponding author.Wildlife Conservation Society, 56 Ave Col Ebeya, Democratic Republic of the CongoWildlife Conservation Society, Avenue du Génértal De Gaulle, Brazzaville, Republic of the CongoWildlife Conservation Society, Avenue du Génértal De Gaulle, Brazzaville, Republic of the CongoWildlife Conservation Society, Avenue du Génértal De Gaulle, Brazzaville, Republic of the CongoWildlife Conservation Society, 56 Ave Col Ebeya, Democratic Republic of the CongoUrban wildmeat consumption can contribute to significant declines in wildlife populations, ecosystem function, and food insecurity security. Describing types of individuals involved in illegal urban wildmeat trafficking can help distinguish ordinary citizens from members of criminal organizations and urban vs. rural dimensions of the activity. This research aimed to: (1) create and apply a typology for urban wildmeat traffickers and sellers; and (2) explore linkages between types of urban wildmeat traffickers and sellers. We used focus groups with experts in Republic of the Congo, February 2019 (N = 2, n = 7–10) to achieve objectives and focused on pangolins, great apes, and dwarf crocodiles. Participants generated risk rankings for each species, typology and city; data was encoded and indexed. Results illustrate heterogeneity in actors involved in the illegal supply chain. Business sideliner and trading charity trafficker types were associated with the highest total risk to wildlife trafficking. A similar pattern of divergence was detected for seller typologies; hidden and casual sellers were associated with the greatest total risk in Pointe Noire and Brazzaville, respectively. Differentiating but not stove piping stakeholders involved in urban wildmeat trafficking will help clarify stages of illegal supply chains as well and promote thinking about new sectors to involve in interventions and solutions, particularly in urban ecosystems thought to be outside the scope to wildlife crime.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2351989421001074BonoboBushmeatChimpanzeeConservation criminologyCrocodileGorilla
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Meredith L. Gore
Robert Mwinyihali
Luc Mayet
Gavinet Duclair Makaya Baku-Bumb
Christian Plowman
Michelle Wieland
spellingShingle Meredith L. Gore
Robert Mwinyihali
Luc Mayet
Gavinet Duclair Makaya Baku-Bumb
Christian Plowman
Michelle Wieland
Typologies of urban wildlife traffickers and sellers
Global Ecology and Conservation
Bonobo
Bushmeat
Chimpanzee
Conservation criminology
Crocodile
Gorilla
author_facet Meredith L. Gore
Robert Mwinyihali
Luc Mayet
Gavinet Duclair Makaya Baku-Bumb
Christian Plowman
Michelle Wieland
author_sort Meredith L. Gore
title Typologies of urban wildlife traffickers and sellers
title_short Typologies of urban wildlife traffickers and sellers
title_full Typologies of urban wildlife traffickers and sellers
title_fullStr Typologies of urban wildlife traffickers and sellers
title_full_unstemmed Typologies of urban wildlife traffickers and sellers
title_sort typologies of urban wildlife traffickers and sellers
publisher Elsevier
series Global Ecology and Conservation
issn 2351-9894
publishDate 2021-06-01
description Urban wildmeat consumption can contribute to significant declines in wildlife populations, ecosystem function, and food insecurity security. Describing types of individuals involved in illegal urban wildmeat trafficking can help distinguish ordinary citizens from members of criminal organizations and urban vs. rural dimensions of the activity. This research aimed to: (1) create and apply a typology for urban wildmeat traffickers and sellers; and (2) explore linkages between types of urban wildmeat traffickers and sellers. We used focus groups with experts in Republic of the Congo, February 2019 (N = 2, n = 7–10) to achieve objectives and focused on pangolins, great apes, and dwarf crocodiles. Participants generated risk rankings for each species, typology and city; data was encoded and indexed. Results illustrate heterogeneity in actors involved in the illegal supply chain. Business sideliner and trading charity trafficker types were associated with the highest total risk to wildlife trafficking. A similar pattern of divergence was detected for seller typologies; hidden and casual sellers were associated with the greatest total risk in Pointe Noire and Brazzaville, respectively. Differentiating but not stove piping stakeholders involved in urban wildmeat trafficking will help clarify stages of illegal supply chains as well and promote thinking about new sectors to involve in interventions and solutions, particularly in urban ecosystems thought to be outside the scope to wildlife crime.
topic Bonobo
Bushmeat
Chimpanzee
Conservation criminology
Crocodile
Gorilla
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2351989421001074
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