Pangolins In Trouble

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Pangolins are found throughout Southeast Asia, including in Singapore. Although they are covered mainly in scales; they are mammals. Pangolins are warm blooded, have hair and feed their babies with milk. These are peaceful creatures, active only at night when they hunt for termites and ants. As they have no teeth, their only defense is to curl up tightly into a ball when they are afraid. Pangolins breed slowly with only one young born each year. Pangolin populations cannot cope. The animals have almost vanished from some Southeast Asian countries due to hunting for trade. Pangolins in Trouble! Pangolins are seized from illegal traders more often than any other type of mammal in the region. Authorities in Southeast Asia have seized 30,000 pangolins from illegal traders over the past 8 years. Pangolins do not thrive in captivity and cannot be farmed. It is highly likely that all the pango- lins in trade come straight from the wild. International trade in Asian pangolins is banned. They are protected under national laws wherever they occur... yet still the trade continues. Mark Auliya/TSEA Adam Oswell/TSEA EW/TSEA

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Plight of pangolins in Singapore and Southeast Asia for the "Save the Pangolin" Gala Dinner on 18 Apr (Sun). More details on the Celebrating Singapore's Biodiversity blog. http://iyb2010singapore.blogspot.com/2010/03/save-our-pangolins.html

Transcript of Pangolins In Trouble

Page 1: Pangolins In Trouble

Pangolins are found throughout Southeast Asia,

including in Singapore.

Although they are covered mainly in scales; they are mammals.

Pangolins are warm blooded, have hair and feed their babies with

milk.

These are peaceful creatures, active only at night when they hunt

for termites and ants.

As they have no teeth, their only defense is to curl up tightly into a

ball when they are afraid.

Pangolins breed slowly with only one young born

each year.

Pangolin populations cannot cope.

The animals have almost vanished from some Southeast Asian

countries due to hunting for trade.

Pangolins in Trouble!

Pangolins are seized from illegal

traders more often than any other

type of mammal in the region.

Authorities in Southeast Asia have

seized 30,000 pangolins from illegal

traders over the past 8 years.

Pangolins do not thrive in captivity

and cannot be farmed.

It is highly likely that all the pango-

lins in trade come straight from the

wild.

International trade in Asian pangolins is banned.

They are protected under national laws wherever they occur...

yet still the trade continues.

Mark Auliya/TSEA

Adam Oswell/TSEA

EW/TSEA

Page 2: Pangolins In Trouble

TRAFFIC Southeast Asia

Unit 3-2, 1st Floor,

Jalan SS23/11, Taman SEA,

47400, Petaling Jaya,

Selangor, Malaysia.

Tel:+6 (03) 78803940

Trade in pangolins is driven by traditional beliefs.

Very little is known about wild pangolins,

without knowledge of the species and

the trade we cannot defend them.

Pangolins need help – NOW!

They are used for a wide variety of reasons including treatment of

asthma and arthritis, to stop infants from drooling and protect

from witchcraft. It is even said by some that eating pangolin

foetus increases virility.

China fuels the demand for the animals with scientists estimating

that 100,000 animals are needed each year to satisfy the demand

for meat and scales.

Malaysia: At least 265 live pangolins were released back into the wild after being seized from illegal wildlife traders between 2008 and 2009.

Indonesia: 14 tonnes of frozen pangolins ready for export seized in Sumatra, 2008.

Viet Nam: 23 tonnes of frozen pangolins seized at Hai Phong Port, 2007.

China: Two traders sentenced to death for smuggling 17 containers of pangolin meat between 2005 and 2006.

Some big seizures have been made...

but the trade still continues - unless it stops,

pangolins are likely to disappear from Southeast Asia

completely.

Pangolins in Trouble!

Julia Ng/TSEA

Elizabeth John/TSEA

Chin Sing Yun/TSEA