Department of Biological Sciences, Macquarie University, North Ryde, New South Wales, Australia.
Department of Zoology, University of Oxford, Oxford, UK.
Conserv Biol. 2021 Oct;35(5):1396-1404. doi: 10.1111/cobi.13716. Epub 2021 Jun 1.
Despite broad scientific consensus that sustainable use of wildlife can enhance conservation efforts, ethical concerns have led some community groups to oppose use of wild animals. Voicing those concerns is legitimate, but underlying philosophical bias should not influence science-based analysis and interpretation. We argue that philosophical biases are common in the scientific literature on trade in wildlife. The critically important case of bias surrounding the use of reptile leathers for luxury fashion illustrates the problem. Based on analysis of official seizures of fashion products made from wildlife, a recent study inferred that criminal activity (as inferred by noncompliance with regulations) was common and increasing and, hence, that authorities needed to adopt more stringent restrictions on the trade. In fact, the conclusions of that study are artifacts of pseudoreplication (e.g., multiple counts of single violations) and biased sampling (e.g., focus on companies with high rates of error) and run directly opposite to actual patterns in the data. As a proportion of overall trade, rates of noncompliance are exceptionally low (<0.4%), are declining, and result primarily from paper-work errors rather than criminal intent (e.g., such errors are more frequent for goods shipped by government authorities than by the commercial fashion industry). The recommendation by the study authors to prohibit the international trade in wildlife-based fashion products is imperiling a sustainable trade that can benefit biodiversity and people's livelihoods by providing financial incentives for conservation of species and habitats. This example offers a warning of the dangers of basing research on the wildlife trade on ethical or philosophical positions rather than objective evaluations of evidence.
尽管科学界普遍认为可持续利用野生物种可以增强保护工作,但一些社区团体出于伦理考虑反对使用野生动物。表达这些担忧是合理的,但不应让潜在的哲学偏见影响基于科学的分析和解释。我们认为,哲学偏见在野生物种贸易的科学文献中很常见。以使用爬行动物皮革制作奢侈品时尚为例,这种偏见的情况至关重要。基于对野生动物时尚产品的官方扣押分析,最近的一项研究推断,犯罪活动(如违反规定)很常见且呈上升趋势,因此当局需要对贸易实施更严格的限制。事实上,该研究的结论是伪重复(例如,单一违规的多次计数)和有偏抽样(例如,关注错误率高的公司)的结果,与数据中的实际模式直接相反。就整体贸易而言,违规率极低(<0.4%),呈下降趋势,主要是由于文书工作错误而不是犯罪意图(例如,政府当局运输的货物比商业时尚行业更频繁出现此类错误)。研究作者建议禁止野生物种时尚产品的国际贸易,这可能会危及可持续贸易,因为这种贸易可以通过为保护物种和栖息地提供经济激励来造福生物多样性和人们的生计。这个例子警告人们,不要基于伦理或哲学立场而非对证据的客观评估来开展野生物种贸易研究。