research article journal article
Opportunistic or Non-RandomWildlife Crime? Attractiveness Rather Than Abundance in theWild Leads to Selective Parrot Poaching
- Publication date
- 1 January 2020
- Publisher
- Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute
Abstract
Illegal wildlife trade, which mostly focuses on high-demand species, constitutes a major
threat to biodiversity. However, whether poaching is an opportunistic crime within high-demand
taxa such as parrots (i.e., harvesting proportional to species availability in the wild), or is selectively
focused on particular, more desirable species, is still under debate. Answering this question has
important conservation implications because selective poaching can lead to the extinction of some
species through overharvesting. However, the challenges of estimating species abundances in the
wild have hampered studies on this subject. We conducted a large-scale survey in Colombia to
simultaneously estimate the relative abundance of wild parrots through roadside surveys (recording
10,811 individuals from 25 species across 2221 km surveyed) and as household, illegally trapped pets
in 282 sampled villages (1179 individuals from 21 species). We used for the first time a selectivity index
to test selection on poaching. Results demonstrated that poaching is not opportunistic, but positively
selects species based on their attractiveness, defined as a function of species size, coloration, and ability
to talk, which is also reflected in their local prices. Our methodological approach, which shows how
selection increases the conservation impacts of poaching for parrots, can be applied to other taxa also
impacted by harvesting for trade or other purposesPeer reviewe