Global trade in wild
African Grey Parrot banned, U.N. meeting rules
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[October 03, 2016]
By Tanisha Heiberg
JOHANNESBURG
(Reuters) - The United Nations has banned global trade in wild African
Grey Parrots, prized for their ability to imitate human speech, to help
counter a decline in numbers caused by trafficking and the loss of
forests.
The highly coveted species was placed on the convention's "Appendix I",
which prohibits any cross-border movement in the birds or their body
parts for commercial purposes.
The decision, made when members of the U.N.'s Convention on
International Trade in Endangered Species (CITES) held a secret ballot
for the first time ever, came at a two week-long convention in
Johannesburg.
"Inclusion in Appendix I is in the best interests of the conservation of
the species as it faces both habitat loss and rampant illegal and
unsustainable trade for the international pet trade," said vice
president and head of the Wildlife Conservation Society delegation Susan
Lieberman.
The African Grey Parrot, usually bred in captivity and sold as a pet,
was listed on "Appendix II" in 1981, which includes species whose trade
must be limited, after concerns over the impact on its numbers.
High levels or deforestation, poor regulation of trade and increased
trafficking for the pet industry have led to the decline of the African
Grey Parrot, which was once widespread across its natural habitat in
central and western Africa.
"During the past 25 years, more than 1.5 million wild African Greys have
been taken from their native habitats, making them one of the most
traded of all CITES-listed parrots," said U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service
Director and head of the U.S. delegation, Dan Ashe.
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An employee feeds a one-month-old African grey parrot at the Royev
Ruchey zoo in a surburb of Krasnoyarsk, Siberia, Russia, March 11,
2016. REUTERS/Ilya Naymushin
The
African Grey Parrot joins the highly endangered pangolin, a scaly animal with
the dubious distinction of being the world's most poached mammal, on the
Appendix I list after global trade in it was banned last week.
The CITES conference, which runs until Oct. 5, will also consider competing
proposals to loosen or tighten the ivory trade, a bid by Swaziland to sell rhino
horn to international buyers, and moves to increase protection for lions, sharks
and rays.
(Reporting by Tanisha Heiberg; Editing by Andrew Bolton)
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