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Quest for Health, Sex, Exotic Food in China Wiping Out Wildlife in Southeast Asia (examples too)
ap ^ | 3/27/04

Posted on 03/27/2004 9:53:52 AM PST by knak

TACHILEIK, Myanmar (AP) - Furry bear paws lie next to neatly arranged skins of jungle cats, skulls of monkeys and horns of mountain goats. The parts of vanishing species from Southeast Asia's forests are laid out for Chinese buyers seeking sex boosters, cures for cancer and exotic food.

"Very strong. It can fight with a tiger, so it's good for sex," the vendor says, pointing to a pair of wild buffalo horns priced at $125 and explaining that in powder form they'll surely enhance virility given the animal's power.

A sizable quantity of wildlife is felled to supply dealers in this scruffy town on the Thailand-Myanmar border. But Tachileik is just one node of a trade network that funnels fauna and flora from across the region to satisfy a seemingly insatiable demand in China.

There, millions of people still believe that rhino horn prevents convulsions, pickled turtle flippers increase longevity and fresh snake blood makes for a potent aphrodisiac. And with China's growing affluence, more can afford exotic wildlife dishes once served only at banquets of the elite.

Having strained China's domestic supply, the network's tentacles are extending to scoop up pangolins in Indonesia, snakes from Vietnam, dendrobium orchids in Laos and the few remaining tigers and bears in Myanmar.

"The biggest problem facing wildlife in Southeast Asia is its domestic consumption in China. The Chinese are vacuuming it up," says Steven Galster, who heads the conservation group WildAid Asia.

Despite some efforts by the Chinese government to curb the trade, ecologists agree the current harvest is unsustainable and will inevitably lead to the eradication of species.

"It doesn't look good. We are at the stage where a lot of species are on the edge. There haven't been a lot of extinctions, but there will be soon," says James Compton, who heads the Southeast Asian office of Traffic, an international treaty agency that monitors trade in wildlife.

Since much of the trade is illegal and often conducted in remote areas, it's difficult to pinpoint numbers. But Compton and others offer some indications of its scale and range:

-Researchers have a far better chance of finding rare turtles in the markets of Shanghai or Guangzhou than the wilds of Southeast Asia, where more than half the species are listed as endangered.

As much as 10,000 tons of freshwater turtles are annually traded in the region for use in food and traditional medicine, creating what the experts say is an "Asian turtle crisis."

In Laos, villagers who a decade ago could sell a golden turtle, the blood of which is said to cure cancer, for $100 now get $1,000. "If a Chinese industrialist has a tumor, he'll offer anything," says Roland Eve, who directs the World Wide Fund for Nature in Laos.

-The tiny seahorse is classified as vulnerable worldwide chiefly because in dried form it is used in Chinese traditional medicine to treat asthma, heart disease, impotence and other ills.

Project Seahorse, a conservation group, estimates 20 million of the creatures are taken each year in the South China Sea and elsewhere, with 95 percent ending up in Chinese apothecaries.

-Having decimated the pangolin populations in Laos, Thailand, Myanmar and China itself, smugglers now seek the scaly anteater in Malaysia and Indonesia. In the first eight months of 2003, some 10,000 animals smuggled from the Indonesian archipelago were seized in southern Thailand.

Selling for $45 a pound in Shanghai, pangolin meat is regarded as highly nutritious while its scales are prescribed for ailments ranging from skin diseases to lack of milk in breast-feeding mothers.

The region's pangolins, snakes and freshwater turtles are now the most intensely sought-after species, having eclipsed the trade in tiger bone, rhino horn and bear gall bladder due to decimation of the latter species and tougher policing of the smuggling of those parts.

The harvesters of wildlife in Southeast Asia are generally poor villagers and fishermen who sell to local markets or small-time dealers, who pass the products into the well-established, sophisticated trade networks crisscrossing the region.

The big-time operators, WildAid and Traffic say, often employ the same routes used for smuggling drugs, people and even weapons, seeking passages where corruption is rife and law enforcement lax. Authorities have nabbed shipments of drugs stuffed into dead animals and of frozen shrimp with iced pangolin or snakes layered beneath them.

The routes are sometimes long and circuitous. A wildlife shipment from Sumatra in Indonesia may pass through Malaysian-Chinese middlemen in Kuala Lumpur who bribe airport officials and fly the cargo by private plane to Vientiane, Laos. It can then be trucked to Vietnam and finally to China through thriving Vietnamese-Chinese wildlife ventures. Singapore and Thailand are also important transit countries.

En route, documents are forged or altered to comply with the U.N. Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species, which most countries in the region, including China, have signed.

Some documents falsely list the source of flora and fauna to farms to get around trade in species proscribed under CITES although these may actually have originated in the wild or been "laundered" through enterprises that breed musk deer, bears, tigers and other endangered species. On farms in China, thousands of live bears are "milked" for their bile, said to fight liver disease, through steel catheters implanted in their gall bladders.

Although enforcement efforts have been stepped up in recent years, Compton says far more manpower and funds are needed, especially in the wake of trade liberalization in the region and the proliferation of air and road links with China.

"Everyone has been biting around the edges, catching the poor villager or trader, the little guys, while the big shipments go free. It's just like the early days of the war on drugs," Galster says.

But as in the drug war, conservationists say, strikes against suppliers must be complemented by education to lessen demand.

"When the buying stops, the killing can, too," is the theme of a widely shown WildAid television spot featuring Asian and international celebrities like kung fu actor Jackie Chan. Peter Benchley, author of the best-selling novel "Jaws," urges people to shun shark's fin soup.

In China, the world's No. 1 consumer of wildlife, the government has begun trying to curb the trade. It pledged in 1999 to secure sustainable trade in wild plants and animals and has banned use of internationally protected species.

Last year, in face of SARS, believed to have sprung from civet cats in southern China's wildlife markets, officials clamped curbs on the eating of wildlife and launched the "Spring Thunderstorm" campaign to go after illegal traders. Early in 2004, authorities made the largest wildlife haul in modern Chinese history, seizing the skins of 31 Bengal tigers, 581 Asian leopards and 778 otters worth more than $1.2 million.

"I think the Chinese government is trying to do something about it, but it is not easy. This is such a part of traditional culture," says Qin Liyi, an officer with the World Conservation Union office in Beijing.

It is also a multibillion-dollar industry, built on consumer beliefs arising from 3,000 years of adherence to traditional Chinese medicine.

The complex, comprehensive approach to health includes the use of more than 11,000 plants and 1,500 animals, and some of its tenets, such as a holistic approach to well-being, have garnered praise worldwide.

But many of the animal parts used for medicines or tonics have been shown scientifically to have no efficacy. This however, Qin notes, doesn't convince people, especially among the older generation, whose faith in the ancient remedies approaches religious fervor.

The Chinese, especially those in the country's southern regions like the Cantonese, are yet to be weaned from "ye wei" - "wild taste" - the belief that exotic fare endows them with added social status and the traits of the animal consumed, such as bravery, long life or sexual prowess.

Conservationists are updating an age-old adage about such omnivorous eating habits: "The Cantonese will eat anything with legs except a table and anything with wings except an airplane."


TOPICS: News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: animalrights; china; environment; southeastasia; superstitions
Examples of Wildlife Used in Traditional Chinese Medicine

The Associated Press
Published: Mar 27, 2004

Sampling of animal and plant parts sold by a typical apothecary catering to traditional Chinese medicine:

-BEAR: Fat, brain, spinal cord and other parts used to treat everything from cancer to general pain. Gall bladder "milked" for bile, which made into medicine for liver disorders. Meat also prized, with paws sometimes cut off while creature still alive. Bears sometimes boiled alive in vats of water.

-TIGER: Another "walking drug store," with almost every part used as powder, balms, pills or meat to be eaten. Penis used as aphrodisiac, bones for arthritis and muscular atrophy, claws against insomnia, fat to fight leprosy, brain to clear pimples. Tiger on black market can fetch up to $10,000.

-SLOW LORIS: Fur of this big-eyed, tree-dwelling primate believed to accelerate healing of wounds. Extract from eyeballs turned into love potion.

-CIVET CAT: Anal scent gland used in potion to induce abortion. Used in Dragon, Tiger and Phoenix soup, for fighting arthritis, stimulating blood flow, pepping up libido.

-RHINOCEROS: Decimated over centuries in belief that horn can cure fevers, convulsions, delirium, headaches, heart and liver problems, toothaches, snake bites. Horn more valuable by weight than gold; other rhino parts also highly prized.

-DENDROBIUM ORCHIDS: Stems of wild golden yellow or pink flowers processed for medicine and tonics to replenish bodily fluids, ease stomach pains, mouth sores, sunstroke. Balms said to make skin soft, moist, beautiful.

-WILD GINSENG: Tonic from root believed to slow aging, enhance vitality, build up resistance to psychological and physical stress, generally strengthen immune system.

1 posted on 03/27/2004 9:53:53 AM PST by knak
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To: knak
Bet we will never see PETA running over there to protest this slaughter. They are full of bravery when protesting Americans eating chicken.

When it comes to Asian countries, they are a bunch of sissies.

2 posted on 03/27/2004 10:14:00 AM PST by 3catsanadog (When anything goes, everything does.)
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To: knak
This the tragedy of the commons, where everyone and no one owns the land. The resources get abused, mis-used and used up.

The solution is private property. When a person has a personal or financial interest in a resource, it is protected, nurtured and propagated.

When the buffalo was near extinction, entrepreneurs moved in and gathered about a dozen animals. They were given a home in a zoo, where they flourished. The result is that tens of thousands of buffalo exist today.
3 posted on 03/27/2004 10:16:37 AM PST by sergeantdave (Gen. Custer wore an Arrowsmith shirt to his last property owner convention.)
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To: knak
"Very strong. It can fight with a tiger, so it's good for sex,"

Medical wisdom at it's finest - just ask Sigfried & Roy...

4 posted on 03/27/2004 10:23:55 AM PST by talleyman (Wimpy tag line? Try Vi-tag-ra!)
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To: knak
Education! Education! Education! Education!

As more and more of the Asians groups learn how to substitute items that can be replenished instead of these rare endangered items this will slow and stop.

They must be educated.

Good post. Thank you.

5 posted on 03/27/2004 10:27:45 AM PST by Khurkris (Ranger On...)
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To: knak
-CIVET CAT: Anal scent gland used in potion to induce abortion
I believe that this is the cat used to make the "cat __it" coffee. I'm wondering if expectant mothers put their selves at risk when they drink this coffee.

Not that any woman who pays hundreds of dollars to drink something that came out of the back side of a cat would ever care. They probably couldn't imagine lowering their selves to such an un-progressive1 idea as child birth.

 

1 I guess the hip term is "regressive"

6 posted on 03/27/2004 10:30:20 AM PST by avg_freeper (Gunga galunga. Gunga, gunga galunga)
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To: knak
The Chinese should go back to eating dogs. Then they all could eat up the Communist Party leadership.
7 posted on 03/27/2004 10:33:25 AM PST by Map Kernow ("I hold that a little rebellion now and then is a good thing" ---Thomas Jefferson)
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To: Map Kernow
Good one. Unfortunately, the Chinese don't eat putrefied rabid dog meat. Eating Communists is a known cure for malaise, atheism, and depression.
8 posted on 03/27/2004 10:39:50 AM PST by AUH2OY2K
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To: knak
You seem to have a knak for posting interesting articles...

A while I was sitting on the Dock of the Bay with Roy Orbison (...OK he wasn't there) and they were unloading large containers of Sea Urchins.

I asked them do people eat those? And their answer was that they shipped them to Asia and the people there eat the reproductive organs.

Yuk

9 posted on 03/27/2004 10:45:27 AM PST by Syncro
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To: 3catsanadog
asian countries would probably tell them where to go sooner
10 posted on 03/27/2004 11:09:43 AM PST by knak
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To: avg_freeper
The trade in civet cats is thought to be the source of the SARS epidemic in China. 'Revenge is best served cold', and the civet gets the last laugh.
11 posted on 03/29/2004 9:59:26 PM PST by Pelham
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