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衡量宠物贸易对印度尼西亚鸟类的影响。

Measuring the impact of the pet trade on Indonesian birds.

作者信息

Harris J Berton C, Tingley Morgan W, Hua Fangyuan, Yong Ding Li, Adeney J Marion, Lee Tien Ming, Marthy William, Prawiradilaga Dewi M, Sekercioglu Cagan H, Winarni Nurul, Wilcove David S

机构信息

Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs, Princeton University, Princeton, NJ, 08544, U.S.A.

Rainforest Trust, 7078 Airlie Road, Warrenton, VA, 20187, U.S.A.

出版信息

Conserv Biol. 2017 Apr;31(2):394-405. doi: 10.1111/cobi.12729. Epub 2016 Mar 31.

Abstract

The trade in wild animals involves one-third of the world's bird species and thousands of other vertebrate species. Although a few species are imperiled as a result of the wildlife trade, the lack of field studies makes it difficult to gauge how serious a threat it is to biodiversity. We used data on changes in bird abundances across space and time and information from trapper interviews to evaluate the effects of trapping wild birds for the pet trade in Sumatra, Indonesia. To analyze changes in bird abundance over time, we used data gathered over 14 years of repeated bird surveys in a 900-ha forest in southern Sumatra. In northern Sumatra, we surveyed birds along a gradient of trapping accessibility, from the edge of roads to 5 km into the forest interior. We interviewed 49 bird trappers in northern Sumatra to learn which species they targeted and how far they went into the forest to trap. We used prices from Sumatran bird markets as a proxy for demand and, therefore, trapping pressure. Market price was a significant predictor of species declines over time in southern Sumatra (e.g., given a market price increase of approximately $50, the log change in abundance per year decreased by 0.06 on average). This result indicates a link between the market-based pet trade and community-wide species declines. In northern Sumatra, price and change in abundance were not related to remoteness (distance from the nearest road). However, based on our field surveys, high-value species were rare or absent across this region. The median maximum distance trappers went into the forest each day was 5.0 km. This suggests that trapping has depleted bird populations across our remoteness gradient. We found that less than half of Sumatra's remaining forests are >5 km from a major road. Our results suggest that trapping for the pet trade threatens birds in Sumatra. Given the popularity of pet birds across Southeast Asia, additional studies are urgently needed to determine the extent and magnitude of the threat posed by the pet trade.

摘要

野生动物贸易涉及世界上三分之一的鸟类物种以及数千种其他脊椎动物物种。尽管有少数物种因野生动物贸易而濒危,但由于缺乏实地研究,很难评估其对生物多样性的威胁有多严重。我们利用鸟类数量在空间和时间上变化的数据以及诱捕者访谈的信息,来评估在印度尼西亚苏门答腊岛诱捕野生鸟类用于宠物贸易的影响。为了分析鸟类数量随时间的变化,我们使用了在苏门答腊岛南部一片900公顷森林中进行的14年重复鸟类调查所收集的数据。在苏门答腊岛北部,我们沿着诱捕可达性梯度对鸟类进行了调查,范围从道路边缘到森林内部5公里处。我们采访了苏门答腊岛北部的49名鸟类诱捕者,以了解他们捕捉哪些物种以及进入森林多远去诱捕。我们将苏门答腊岛鸟类市场的价格作为需求的代理指标,从而作为诱捕压力的指标。市场价格是苏门答腊岛南部物种数量随时间下降的一个重要预测指标(例如,市场价格每增加约50美元,每年数量的对数变化平均减少0.06)。这一结果表明基于市场的宠物贸易与整个群落物种数量下降之间存在联系。在苏门答腊岛北部,价格和数量变化与偏远程度(距最近道路的距离)无关。然而,根据我们的实地调查,该地区高价值物种稀少或不存在。诱捕者每天进入森林的最大距离中位数为5.0公里。这表明诱捕已使我们研究的偏远程度梯度上的鸟类种群数量减少。我们发现,苏门答腊岛剩余森林中不到一半距离主要道路超过5公里。我们的结果表明,为宠物贸易进行的诱捕威胁着苏门答腊岛的鸟类。鉴于宠物鸟在东南亚很受欢迎,迫切需要开展更多研究来确定宠物贸易造成的威胁的范围和程度。

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