Python skin origins unclear
The International Union for the Conservation of Nature (IUCN)
on Monday warned that allegedly farmed python skins originating from
Cambodia could in fact have been harvested in the wild, and called for
surveys to determine the scale and impact of possible python hunting in
the Kingdom.
In a report on the sustainability of the python skin industry – which
supplies manufacturers of luxury goods like handbags – the IUCN said
that since it could not confirm the existence of any python farms in
Cambodia, shipments identified as having been farmed, such as a reported
shipment of 2,000 skins in the year 2000, should be viewed with a
measure of scepticism.
“Field surveys should be considered in Viet Nam, and neighbouring
countries (Cambodia, China, Lao PDR, Thailand), to determine if wild
collection of pythons is still occurring, and if so, at what scale and
impact to local populations,” it continues.
The report hypothesises that farmed skins being exported as
originating in Vietnam could have been “sold across the porous border”
by rumoured python farms in Cambodia.
The IUCN, however, has recently been unable to find any registered farms.
Nick Marx, director of wildlife rescue and care at Wildlife Alliance,
said that he too had no knowledge of such farms in Cambodia, but was
aware of python slaughterhouses.
And while he was not familiar with any trade in python hides, he
added, legal enterprises that farm valuable animals are often “a
smokescreen that disguises illegal trade in that species”.
“If you’ve got a farm, it’s easy to continue an illegal wildlife
trade in that species, because they can say that it comes from the farm,
when in fact it was harvested in the wild,” Marx said, noting that some
consider such farms good for conservation “but in fact, it’s quite the
opposite, unless the farms are very closely monitored”.
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