PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Illegal trade and poor regulation threaten pangolins in China

Illegal trade and poor regulation threaten pangolins in China
2023-04-03
(Press-News.org)

Pangolins, unique scale-covered mammals, are drastically declining in numbers across Asia and Africa, largely due to illegal trade. Part of the trade, both legal and illegal, supports the traditional Chinese medicine market, which has attracted conservation attention. The level of demand for pangolins and other animals in traditional Chinese medicine, however, hasn’t been thoroughly studied.

In a new study published in the journal Nature Conservation, Dr Yifu Wang, currently a postdoc researcher at the University of Hong Kong, investigated pangolin scale trade in China, interviewing staff in hospitals and pharmaceutical shops in two provinces (Henan and Hainan). Between October 2016 and April 2017, she and her team talked to doctors from 41 hospitals and shop owners and assistants from 134 pharmaceutical shops.

The research found pangolin scales and their derivatives were widely available in hospitals and pharmaceutical shops across Henan and Hainan Provinces. The legislation in place, however, has not been able to prevent ongoing illegal trade in pangolin products. Her team found that 46% of surveyed hospitals and 34% of surveyed pharmaceutical shops were selling pangolin scale products illegally.

“Existing legal trade allows 711 hospitals to sell pangolin products as medicine with regulations on manufacturer, package, and national annual sale quantity,” explains Dr Yifu Wang. “However, we show that pangolin scales are under heavy demand and unpermitted sellers are commonly found illegally selling pangolin products.”

“Quantities of products traded by permitted legal sellers are estimated to greatly exceed the supply capacity of legal sources,” she continues.

This widespread illegal trade, coupled with the very limited legal supply capacity compared to market demand, is concerning. The researchers point to the urgent need to reduce demand from traditional Chinese medicine on pangolin scales and revise the current legal pangolin scale trade system.

“We also highlight the importance of incorporating the traditional Chinese medicine sector into combating illegal wildlife trade and species conservation beyond pangolins,” they conclude.

The researchers plan to continue investigating the pangolin scale market in China to understand the trade after COVID-19.

 

Original source:

Wang Y, Turvey ST, Leader-Williams N (2023) The scale of the problem: understanding the demand for medicinal pangolin products in China. Nature Conservation 52: 47-61. https://doi.org/10.3897/natureconservation.52.95916

END


[Attachments] See images for this press release:
Illegal trade and poor regulation threaten pangolins in China

ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

DELLA proteins could hold key to the next Green Revolution

2023-04-03
A family of ‘promiscuous’ proteins found in all land plants is responsible for many different plant functions, despite remaining relatively unchanged for over 450 million years. New findings, published in Nature Plants and New Phytologist reveal new knowledge about how DELLA proteins regulate how much a plant grows, when germination occurs and how plants deals with threats such as drought and disease. The key is not in DELLA proteins’ ability to mutate over time, but instead in their ability to interact with dozens of different transcription factors, the proteins responsible for decoding DNA. Understanding the mechanisms which underpin ...

Rising temperatures alter ‘missing link’ of microbial processes, putting northern peatlands at risk

Rising temperatures alter ‘missing link’ of microbial processes, putting northern peatlands at risk
2023-04-03
If you’re an avid gardener, you may have considered peat moss — decomposed Sphagnum moss that helps retain moisture in soil — to enhance your home soil mixture. And while the potting medium can help plants thrive, it’s also a key component of peatlands: wetlands characterized by a thick layer of water-saturated, carbon-rich peat beneath living Sphagnum moss, trees, and other plant life.  These ecosystems cover just 3% of Earth’s land area, but “peatlands store over one-third of all soil carbon on the planet,” explains Joel Kostka, professor and associate chair of Research in the School of Biological ...

Maclean studying paid sick leave mandates & mental health care service use

2023-04-03
Catherine Maclean, Associate Professor, Schar School of Policy and Government, received $641,155 from the National Institutes of Health for: "Paid Sick Leave Mandates and Mental Healthcare Service Use."  This project will provide the first causal estimates of the effect of state and local paid sick leave (PSL) mandates on access to PSL among those with mental health disorder(s), use of mental health care, and indicators of potential quality of mental health care received. It will also examine how community-level factors (e.g., mental health ...

How two different types of immune cells help two billion people keep tuberculosis in check

2023-04-03
More than 10 million people are sickened by tuberculosis (TB) globally each year, resulting in 1.5 million deaths. Yet, as many as two billion people are infected with Mycobaterium tuberculosis, the bacterium that causes tuberculosis, and are otherwise healthy and asymptomatic. Scientists who study TB look at those individuals who can tolerate and contain the infection in hopes of developing better treatments and vaccines. The key feature of tuberculosis infection in humans is the formation of granulomas, or clusters of immune cells in the lungs that contain the infection. These granulomas contain B cells, all-purpose immune cells that perform a variety of functions, from producing ...

Do Earth-like exoplanets have magnetic fields? Far-off radio signal is promising sign

Do Earth-like exoplanets have magnetic fields? Far-off radio signal is promising sign
2023-04-03
Earth's magnetic field does more than keep everyone's compass needles pointed in the same direction. It also helps preserve Earth’s sliver of life-sustaining atmosphere by deflecting high energy particles and plasma regularly blasted out of the sun. Researchers have now identified a prospective Earth-sized planet in another solar system as a prime candidate for also having a magnetic field — YZ Ceti b, a rocky planet orbiting a star about 12 light-years away from Earth. Researchers Sebastian Pineda and Jackie Villadsen observed a repeating radio signal emanating from the star YZ Ceti using the Karl G. Jansky Very Large Array, a radio telescope ...

Higher lithium levels in drinking water may raise autism risk

2023-04-03
Pregnant women whose household tap water had higher levels of lithium had a moderately higher risk of their offspring being diagnosed with autism spectrum disorder, according to a new study led by a UCLA Health researcher. The study, published April 3 in JAMA Pediatrics, is believed to be the first to identify naturally occurring lithium in drinking water as a possible environmental risk factor for autism. “Any drinking water contaminants that may affect the developing human brain deserve intense scrutiny,” said lead study author Beate Ritz, MD, PhD, professor of neurology in the David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA ...

Nasal vaccine to prevent COVID-19 passes first tests

Nasal vaccine to prevent COVID-19 passes first tests
2023-04-03
Since the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic, researchers have been working on mucosal vaccines that can be administered through the nose. Now, scientists in Berlin have developed a live attenuated vaccine for the nose. In “Nature Microbiology”, they describe the special immune protection it induces. Joint press release by Freie Universität Berlin, Max Delbrück Center and Charité – Universitätsmedizin Berlin Coronaviruses spread primarily through the air. When infected people speak, cough, sneeze or laugh, they expel droplets of saliva containing the virus. Other people then breathe ...

Research finds global emissions of several banned ozone-destroying chemicals are increasing

Research finds global emissions of several banned ozone-destroying chemicals are increasing
2023-04-03
The research, published today in Nature Geoscience and led by the University of Bristol and National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), puts the rise in part down to the chemicals, known as chlorofluorocarbons or CFCs, being used to make other ozone-friendly alternatives to CFCs. This is an exception allowed under the Montreal Protocol, but contrary to its wider goals. Lead author Dr Luke Western, a Research Fellow at the University of Bristol and researcher at the NOAA’s Global Monitoring Laboratory (GML), said: “We’re paying attention to these emissions now because of the success of the Montreal Protocol. CFC ...

Early menopause, later start to hormone therapy may increase risk of Alzheimer’s disease

2023-04-03
BOSTON — Women are more likely than men to develop Alzheimer’s disease (AD), with women making up two-thirds of the population living with AD. A new study, led by Mass General Brigham researchers, sheds light on the relationship between the risk of Alzheimer’s disease and age of menopause and use of hormone therapy (HT). The results, published in JAMA Neurology, indicate that early age at menopause may be a risk factor for AD dementia, but that women who were prescribed HT around the age of menopause onset did not show increased risk. “HT is the most reliable way to ameliorate severe menopause symptoms, ...

Comparison of postpartum opioid prescriptions before vs during pandemic

2023-04-03
About The Study: In this study of 460,000 privately insured postpartum women, patients who gave birth to a single, live newborn after March 2020 were more likely to fill more potent and more frequent opioid prescriptions than patients who gave birth prior to March 2020. Increases were larger for patients delivering via cesarean birth than those delivering vaginally. Increases in opioid prescriptions may be associated with increased risk of opioid misuse, opioid use disorder, and opioid-related overdose among postpartum women.  Authors: Shelby R. Steuart, M.P.A., of ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

New strontium isotope map of Sub-Saharan Africa is a powerful tool for archaeology, forensics, and wildlife conservation

‘Sandwich carers’ experience decline in mental and physical health

A new way to determine whether a species will successfully invade an ecosystem

A change in the weather in the U.S. Corn Belt

How we classify flood risk may give developers, home buyers a false sense of security

GLP-1 drugs may reduce surgery complications in patients with diabetes

Physicists explain a stellar stream’s distinctive features

GLP-1 RA medications safe and very effective for treating obesity in adults without diabetes

Efforts to reduce kids' screen time weakened by unequal access to green space

Study reveals rising interest in permanent contraception after Roe v. Wade was overturned

U of M Medical School study finds point-of-care ultrasound enhances early pregnancy care, cuts emergency visits by 81%

Ice patches on Beartooth Plateau reveal how ancient landscape differed from today’s

MMRI scientist publishes breakthrough study detailing how ketones improves blood flow to the heart

2025 Seismological Society of America Annual Meeting

New AI tool uses routine blood tests to predict immunotherapy response for many cancers

1 in 4 U.S. veterans aged 60+ report having being diagnosed with cardiovascular disease at some point, with potential implications for their physical and mental health

These 11 genes may help us better understand forever chemicals’ effects on the brain

Microplastics widespread in seafood people eat

Lead pollution likely caused widespread IQ declines in ancient Rome, new study finds

Researchers reveal ancient dietary habits and early human use of plant foods

NRG Oncology adds new theranostics subcommittee to organization, new leadership members for CCDR and early phase trial oversight committees

New NEJM Perspective article highlights urgent need for widespread adoption of Fracture Liaison Services (FLS) to combat rising burden of osteoporosis-related fractures

Hornwort genomes provide clues on how plants conquered the land

New mechanism discovered that triggers immune response in cells with damaged DNA

Model proposed for treating loneliness in borderline personality disorder

Marco Demaria named editor-in-chief of Aging (Aging-US)

A healthy diet is key to a healthy gut microbiome

New study links millions of diabetes and heart disease cases globally to sugary drinks

Fluoride exposure and children’s IQ scores

Trends in treatment need and receipt for substance use disorders in the US

[Press-News.org] Illegal trade and poor regulation threaten pangolins in China