Williams Vivienne L, Drouilly Marine, Coals Peter G R, Whittington-Jones Gareth M
School of Animal, Plant and Environmental Sciences, University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, South Africa.
Panthera, New York, NY, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2025 Mar 25;20(3):e0315903. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0315903. eCollection 2025.
The consumptive use of fauna, encompassing the extraction of skins and derivatives, undermines vulnerable species' resilience to persistent offtake. Evidence of pervasive, Africa-wide hunting and trafficking of wildlife underscores the need to understand the drivers and extent of this utilisation and exploitation. Here, we investigated evidence for the cultural use of 33 African carnivore species (Felidae, Viverridae, Nandiniidae, terrestrial Mustelidae) across Africa, a hitherto under-explored consumptive use threat, by conducting a systematic mixed-methods review and analysis of incidence records from nearly 600 published accounts and 555 YouTube videos. Aims were to: (i) characterise the main types of documented cultural uses behind the extraction and trade of selected carnivore taxa and examine the Africa-wide occurrence and extent of these practices; (ii) identify regional and national nexuses of African trade and trafficking; and (iii) explore factors that may perpetuate utilisation of certain species and products. Results for 48 African countries show that traditional use is widespread, including for purposes like attire, zootherapy and bushmeat. The culturally endowed legacy of diverse traditions suggests that these mostly under-reported and unquantified customary practices exist on a spectrum of cultural importance, impact, and extirpation risk for species population decline. Most incidence records were of spotted carnivore skins worn by traditional leaders, healers and participants in thousands of annual cultural events. In particular, leopards serve as prominent symbols of power and are mostly sought after by higher-ranking individuals. Lions are widely used in the attire of royalty, healing practices, and are periodically killed due to human-wildlife conflict with their parts sometimes subsequently removed and used. While most incidence-based records linked larger felids to traditional use, the reporting and impact on smaller spotted carnivores should not be overlooked. Smaller species also hold intrinsic cultural value, including skins for regalia and serving as substitutes for declining larger spotted felids.
对动物的消耗性利用,包括兽皮和衍生物的获取,削弱了脆弱物种应对持续捕猎的恢复能力。整个非洲普遍存在的野生动物捕猎和贩运证据凸显了了解这种利用和开发的驱动因素及程度的必要性。在此,我们通过对近600篇已发表文献和555个YouTube视频中的事件记录进行系统的混合方法审查和分析,调查了非洲各地对33种非洲食肉动物物种(猫科、灵猫科、非洲灵猫科、陆生鼬科)的文化利用证据,这是一种迄今未充分探索的消耗性利用威胁。目标是:(i)描述所选食肉动物分类群的获取和贸易背后记录在案的主要文化利用类型,并研究这些做法在整个非洲的发生情况和程度;(ii)确定非洲贸易和贩运的区域和国家联系;(iii)探索可能使某些物种和产品的利用持续存在的因素。48个非洲国家的结果表明,传统用途很普遍,包括用于服饰、动物疗法和丛林肉等目的。多样传统所赋予的文化遗产表明,这些大多未被充分报道和量化的习俗做法在文化重要性、影响以及物种数量减少的灭绝风险方面存在差异。大多数事件记录是关于传统领袖、治疗师以及数千场年度文化活动参与者所穿戴的有斑点食肉动物的兽皮。特别是,豹是权力的突出象征,大多受到地位较高者的追捧。狮子广泛用于王室服饰、治疗实践,并且由于人与野生动物冲突而被定期捕杀,其部分有时随后被取下使用。虽然大多数基于事件的记录将大型猫科动物与传统用途联系起来,但对小型有斑点食肉动物的报道及其影响也不应被忽视。较小的物种也具有内在的文化价值,包括用于制作王室礼服的兽皮,以及作为数量减少的大型有斑点猫科动物的替代品。