Researchers in the field estimate that 45-65% of wild-caught African grey parrots (Psittacus erithacus erithacus) die
before arrival at markets and quarantine facilities in Kinshasa,
capital of the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC).
Project (www.bonoboincongo.com), clarifies that trappers lose an average of 25%, local buyers declare a 10-40% mortality rate, and air
transport to distant markets can kill up to 10% per shipment. Why are
these losses acceptable? A local trapper gets only $15-25 per grey
parrot. Local traders sell these parrots for $50-100 to international
import/export specialists. In South Africa, for example, grey parrots
can sell for over $300 in pet stores. Yes, we need better research on
this problem, but it is clear that conservation action is necessary. Are
individual grey parrots simply not valuable enough for local trappers
and buyers to invest in better care? Do the syndicates, the “African
Grey Mafia”, care about these losses or does this process simply get rid
of the old and the weak? Hundreds of thousands of wild grey parrots
have been unsustainably removed from the wild in the last decade. Now
one of the most populous pets on earth and threatened with extinction in
the wild, the grey parrot needs urgent conservation action…
The Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild
Fauna and Flora (CITES) is failing to protect grey parrots from local
extinctions. CITES export quotas for grey parrots are still based on
limited, out-dated census data from too few sample sites. We have now
allowed grey parrots to be among the most traded wild birds on CITES
Appendix II for several decades without any concrete data to support
“harvesting” quotas. South Africa requested a Non-Detrimental Findings
(NDF) report on the trade in wild-caught African grey parrots from the
Ministry of Environment in the DRC, but no such study has been
undertaken and trade continues.
Between 2007 and 2011 just over 60,000 wild-caught African grey
parrots were recorded in exports from the DRC, South Africa,
Congo-Brazzaville, Senegal, Guinea, Namibia and Bahrain. Exports of
captive-bred grey parrots from just South Africa, Bahrain and Senegal
over the same period total over 120,000! Why are we threatening wild
populations if we are able to supply two-thirds of global exports with
captive-bred stock? The answer: Most wild-caught grey parrots in
international trade are controlled by global syndicates that use these
parrots as breeding stock in ‘bird mills” that produce thousands of
pre-weaned chicks for export to both established and emerging markets.
All wild-caught bird imports have been banned in the United States since
1992. Americans are inadvertently supporting the trade in wild-caught
grey parrots by unknowingly buying chicks bred in “bird mills” in South
Africa, Bahrain, Pakistan and Mozambique. The parents of these
captive-bred chicks are wild and will typically only survive a few years
in these breeding facilities.
This trade is perpetuated by a con and
only benefits profiteering syndicates. Ongoing trade in wild-caught grey
parrots needs to be shut down by CITES and local governments.
All trappers in remote parts of the DRC, Cameroon and West Africa are
funded by traders that equip and support them. Government, state
veterinarians and customs officials are consistently involved in this
lucrative trade. Syndicates use profits to fund trade in other
endangered species, including monkeys, parrots, reptiles, plants and
tropical fish. Central and West African tropical forests have lost
between 25,000 and 35,000 wild grey parrots each year over the last four
years. We have no idea how many grey parrots remain in the wild, but
have roost and flock size counts that demonstrate a population collapse
in the last decade. We need to act now to bring back the massive flocks
of grey parrots that used to fly over Africa’s tropical forests.
In the Congo trappers have been moving further east in search of new
grey parrot capture sites in the Orientale and Maniema Provinces for the
last few years. Once abundant forests are now being chopped down and
the monkeys, birds, elephants, buffalo, parrots and everything else
removed dead or alive. Many, many hungry eyes scanning through the
forest canopy for any signs of life. The “African silence” is spreading
into the remotest parts of the Congo forests as desperate trappers and
poachers compete to supply traders that sell to booming emerging
markets.
South Africa imports most of the Congo’s wild-caught grey parrots for
use in large bird mills that export up to 27,000 grey parrots per year.
In supplying South African syndicates with wild grey parrots for
breeding stock in 2009, the DRC exceeded their CITES export quota by
over double. After the death of 687 wild-caught grey parrots on a
commercial flight in 2011, the South African authorities are familiar
with the issues surrounding the ongoing trade in African grey parrots.
CITES Import permits are, however, still being issued by the South
African government for wild-caught grey parrots coming from the DRC.
South Africans stand here in judgement of the people running the
international trade in ivory and rhino horn, yet we allow the
exploitation of wild African grey parrots within our borders.
There is no doubt that the global avicultural industry can supply all
the demands of international trade in grey parrots using captive-bred
breeding stock. Syndicates that use wild-caught grey parrots as breeding
stock in South Africa, Bahrain, Mozambique and Senegal are, however,
able to undercut aviculturalists that do not use wild birds. Laws must
be put in place that restrict the use of wild-caught birds as breeding
stock, while supporting the development of the avicultural industry. The
only people not taken care of are the local trappers that receive very
little per bird, but depend on this income to support their families.
These people and communities must either be taught avicultural practices
or provided alternative sources of income like ecotourism or
agricultural development. We need to count exactly how many there are
and then look at ways of protecting vulnerable populations without
undermining local communities.
We know near nothing about the ecology of African grey parrots and
have noted them nesting in tree cavities and clay cliffs. Why do they
congregate each year in large flocks in forest clearings with salty mud
that they ingest? Why do they have prominent day-time information
centres and communal roost sites that form part of their little-known
social system?
We know how to catch them on the ground using nets, in
trees using glue, and on poles with snares. We know how to keep them
alive in captivity and how to transport them in large numbers, but we
have no idea what their most important food item in the wild is or what
tree species are the best for nest cavities. The Wildlife Conservation
Society is convening a workshop in Cameroon this month to develop a
strategy for grey parrot conservation and make sure we get the correct
information to act upon…
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