4.6 Article

Realities of offering advice to governments on CITES

期刊

CONSERVATION BIOLOGY
卷 34, 期 3, 页码 644-653

出版社

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/cobi.13451

关键词

assessment; fisheries; Hippocampus; sustainable trade; Thailand; evaluacion; hipocampos; mercado sustentable; pesquerias Tailandia; (sic); (sic); (sic)(sic)(sic)(sic); (sic)(sic); (sic)(sic)

资金

  1. Ocean Park Conservation Foundation of Hong Kong
  2. Riverbanks Zoo and Garden Conservation Fund
  3. The Explorer's Club Exploration Fund
  4. SciFund Challenge
  5. Bottom Billion Fieldwork Fund
  6. FBR Capital Investments
  7. John G. Shedd Aquarium
  8. Guylian Chocolates Belgium

向作者/读者索取更多资源

What happens when those who provide conservation advice are required to take policy and management action based on that advice? Conservation advocates and scientists often try to prompt regulatory change that has significant implications for government without facing the challenge of managing such change. Through a case study, we placed ourselves in the role of the government of Thailand, facing obligations to seahorses (Hippocampus spp.) under the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora (CITES). These obligations include ensuring that its exports of seahorses do not damage wild populations. We applied a CITES-approved framework (which we developed) to evaluate the risks of such exports to 2 seahorse species. We used the framework to evaluate the pressures that put wild populations of the species at risk; whether current management mitigates the risk or offsets these pressures; and whether the species is responding as hoped to management policy. We based our analysis on information in published and grey literature, local knowledge, citizen science data, results of government research, and expert opinion. To meet CITES obligations, exports of both species would need to be prohibited until more precautionary adaptive management emerged. The risk of any exports of Hippocampus trimaculatus was above a tolerable level because of a lack of appropriate management to mitigate risks. In contrast, the risk of any exports of Hippocampus kuda could become tolerable if monitoring were put in place to assess the species' response to management. The process we developed for Authorities to determine risk in response to CITES guidelines was challenging to implement even without the need for government to consider social implications of conservation action. Despite the imperfections of our risk evaluation, however, it still served to support adaptive management. Conservationists need to keep implementation in mind when offering advice.

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