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Wikipedia

Poaching

Poaching is the illegal hunting or capturing of wild animals, usually associated with land use rights.[1][2] Poaching was once performed by impoverished peasants for subsistence purposes and to supplement meager diets.[3] It was set against the hunting privileges of nobility and territorial rulers.[4]

The Poacher by Frédéric Rouge (1867–1950)

Since the 1980s, the term "poaching" has also been used to refer to the illegal harvesting of wild plants.[5][6] In agricultural terms, the term 'poaching' is also applied to the loss of soils or grass by the damaging action of feet of livestock, which can affect availability of productive land, water pollution through increased runoff and welfare issues for cattle.[7] Stealing livestock, as in cattle raiding classifies as theft, not as poaching.[8]

The United Nations' Sustainable Development Goal 15 enshrines the sustainable use of all wildlife. It targets the taking of action on dealing with poaching and trafficking of protected species of flora and fauna to ensure their availability for present and future generations.[9]

Legal aspects edit

 
The Poacher, 1916 sketch by Tom Thomson, Art Gallery of Ontario, Toronto

In 1998, environmental scientists from the University of Massachusetts Amherst proposed the concept of poaching as an environmental crime and defined as any illegal activity that contravenes the laws and regulations established to protect renewable natural resources, including the illegal harvest of wildlife with the intention of possessing, transporting, consuming or selling it and using its body parts. They considered poaching as one of the most serious threats to the survival of plant and animal populations.[6] Wildlife biologists and conservationists consider poaching to have a detrimental effect on biodiversity both within and outside protected areas as wildlife populations decline, species are depleted locally, and the functionality of ecosystems is disturbed.[10]

Continental Europe edit

 
End of the poacher, illustration based on a painting by August Dieffenbacher, 1894
 
Grave of a poacher in Schliersee, quoting the first stanza of the Jennerwein song. Now and then, poached game is being placed on the grave to commemorate 'Girgl'.
 
Marterl at the Riederstein, near Baumgartenschneid, Tegernsee. The remains of a poacher, who had never returned from a hunting expedition in 1861, were found at the site in 1897.[11]

Austria and Germany refer to poaching not as theft but as intrusion into third-party hunting rights.[12] While ancient Germanic law allowed any free man, including peasants, to hunt, especially on common land, Roman law restricted hunting to the rulers. In medieval Europe rulers of feudal territories from the king downward tried to enforce exclusive rights of the nobility to hunt and fish on the lands that they ruled. Poaching was deemed a serious crime punishable by imprisonment, but enforcement was comparably weak until the 16th century. Peasants were still allowed to continue small game hunting, but the right of the nobility to hunt was restricted in the 16th century and transferred to land ownership. The low quality of guns made it necessary to approach the game as close as 30 m (100 ft). Poachers in the Salzburg region were typically unmarried men around 30 years of age and usually alone on their illegal trade.[13]

The development of modern hunting rights is closely connected to the comparatively modern idea of exclusive private ownership of land. In the 17th and the 18th centuries, the restrictions on hunting and shooting rights on private property were enforced by gamekeepers and foresters. They denied shared usage of forests, such as resin collection and wood pasture and the peasants right to hunt and fish. However, by end of the 18th century, comparably-easy access to rifles increasingly allowed peasants and servants to poach.[14] Hunting was used in the 18th century as a theatrical[clarification needed] demonstration of the aristocratic rule of the land and also had a strong impact on land use patterns.[15] Poaching not only interfered with property rights but also clashed symbolically with the power of the nobility. Between 1830 and 1848, poaching and poaching-related deaths increased in Bavaria.[16] The German revolutions of 1848–49 were interpreted as a general permission for poaching in Bavaria. The reform of the hunting law in 1849 restricted legal hunting to rich landowners and middle classes who could pay hunting fees, which led to disappointment among the general public, who continued to view poachers favourably.[dubious ][16] Some of the frontier regions, where smuggling was important, showed especially strong resistance to that development. In 1849, the Bavarian military forces were asked to occupy a number of municipalities on the frontier with Austria. Both in Wallgau (now part of Garmisch-Partenkirchen) and in Lackenhäuser, in the Bavarian forest, each household had to feed and accommodate one soldier for a month as part of a military mission to quell the disturbance. The people of Lackenhäuser had several skirmishes with Austrian foresters and military that started due to poached deer. The well-armed people set against the representatives of the state were known as bold poachers (kecke Wilderer).[4] Some poachers and their violent deaths, like Matthias Klostermayr (1736–1771), Georg Jennerwein (1848–1877) and Pius Walder (1952–1982) gained notoriety and have had a strong cultural impact, which has persisted until today.[13] Poaching was used as a dare. It had a certain erotic connotation, as in Franz Schubert's Hunter's love song, (1828, Schubert Thematic Catalogue 909). The lyrics of Franz von Schober connected unlimited hunting with the pursuit of love. Further poaching related legends and stories ranged from the 1821 opera Freischütz to Wolfgang Franz von Kobell's 1871 story about the Brandner Kasper, a Tegernsee locksmith and poacher who struck a special deal with the Grim Reaper.[5]

While poachers had strong local support until the early 20th century, Walder's case showed a significant change in attitudes. Urban citizens still had some sympathy for the hillbilly rebel, but the local community were much supportive.[12]

United Kingdom edit

 
Brass plaque on door at Tremedda farm dating to 1868, warning that poachers shall be shot on first sight

Poaching, like smuggling, has a long history in United Kingdom. The verb poach is derived from the Middle English word pocchen literally meaning bagged, enclosed in a bag, which is cognate with "pouch".[17][18] Poaching was dispassionately reported for England in "Pleas of the Forest", transgressions of the rigid Anglo-Norman forest law.[19] William the Conqueror, who was a great lover of hunting, established and enforced a system of forest law. That operated outside the common law and served to protect game animals and their forest habitat from hunting by the common people of England and reserved hunting rights for the new French-speaking Anglo-Norman aristocracy. Henceforth, hunting of game in royal forests by commoners, or in other words poaching, was invariably punishable by death by hanging. In 1087, the poem "The Rime of King William", contained in the Peterborough Chronicle, expressed English indignation at the severe new laws. Poaching was romanticised in literature from the time of the ballads of Robin Hood, as an aspect of the "greenwood" of Merry England. In one tale, Robin Hood is depicted as offering King Richard the Lion Heart venison from deer that was illegally hunted in the Sherwood Forest, the King overlooking the fact that this hunting was a capital offence. The widespread acceptance of the common criminal activity is encapsulated in the observation Non est inquirendum, unde venit venison ("It is not to be inquired, whence comes the venison") that was made by Guillaume Budé in his Traitte de la vénerie.[20] However, the English nobility and land owners were in the long term extremely successful in enforcing the modern concept of property, such as expressed in the enclosures of common land and later in the Highland Clearances, both of which were forced displacement of people from traditional land tenancies and erstwhile-common land. The 19th century saw the rise of acts of legislation, such as the Night Poaching Act 1828 and the Game Act 1831 in the United Kingdom, and various laws elsewhere.

United States edit

 
Lady Baltimore, a bald eagle in Alaska survived a poaching attempt in the Juneau Raptor Center mews on 15 August 2015

In North America, the blatant defiance of the laws by poachers escalated to armed conflicts with law authorities, including the Oyster Wars of the Chesapeake Bay and the joint US-British Bering Sea Anti-Poaching Operations of 1891 over the hunting of seals.

Violations of hunting laws and regulations concerning wildlife management, local or international wildlife conservation schemes constitute wildlife crimes that are typically punishable.[21][22] The following violations and offenses are considered acts of poaching in the US:

Africa edit

Stephen Corry, the director of the human rights group Survival International, has argued that the term "poaching" has at times been used to criminalize the traditional subsistence techniques of indigenous peoples and to bar them from hunting on their ancestral lands when they are declared as wildlife-only zones.[25] Corry argues that parks such as the Central Kalahari Game Reserve are managed for the benefit of foreign tourists and safari groups at the expense of the livelihoods of tribal peoples such as the Kalahari bushmen.[26]

Motives edit

Sociological and criminological research on poaching indicates that in North America people poach for commercial gain, home consumption, trophies, pleasure, and thrill in killing wildlife or because they disagree with certain hunting regulations, claim a traditional right to hunt, or have negative dispositions toward legal authority.[6] In rural areas of the United States, the key motives for poaching are poverty.[27] Interviews conducted with 41 poachers in the Atchafalaya River basin in Louisiana revealed that 37 of them hunt to provide food for themselves and their families; 11 stated that poaching is part of their personal or cultural history; nine earn money from the sale of poached game to support their families; and eight feel exhilarated and thrilled by outsmarting game wardens.[28]

In rural areas in Africa, the key motives for poaching are the lack of employment opportunities and a limited potential for agriculture and livestock production. Poor people rely on natural resources for their survival and generate cash income through the sale of bushmeat, which attracts high prices in urban centres. Body parts of wildlife are also in demand for traditional medicine and ceremonies.[10] The existence of an international market for poached wildlife implies that well-organised gangs of professional poachers enter vulnerable areas to hunt, and crime syndicates organise the trafficking of wildlife body parts through a complex interlinking network to markets outside the respective countries of origin.[29][30] Armed conflict in Africa has been linked to intensified poaching and wildlife declines within protected areas,[31] likely reflecting the disruption of traditional livelihoods, which causes people to seek alternative food sources.

Results of an interview survey conducted in several villages in Tanzania indicate that one of the major reasons of poaching is for consumption and sale of bushmeat. Usually, bushmeat is considered a subset of poaching because of the hunting of animals regardless of the laws that conserve certain species of animals. Many families consume more bushmeat if there are no alternative sources of protein available such as fish. The further the families were from the reserve, the less likely they were to illegally hunt wildlife for bushmeat. They were more likely to hunt for bushmeat right before the harvest season and during heavy rains, as before the harvest season, there is not much agricultural work, and heavy rainfall obscures human tracks and makes it easier for poachers to get away with their crimes.[32]

Poverty seems to be a large impetus to cause people to poach, something that affects both residents in Africa and Asia. For example, in Thailand, there are anecdotal accounts of the desire for a better life for children, which drive rural poachers to take the risk of poaching even though they dislike exploiting the wildlife.[33]

Another major cause of poaching is the cultural high demand of wildlife products, such as ivory, which are seen as symbols of status and wealth in China. According to Joseph Vandegrift, China saw an unusual spike in demand for ivory in the 21st century because the economic boom allowed more middle-class Chinese to have a higher purchasing power, which incentivized them to show off their newfound wealth by using ivory, which has been a rare commodity since the Han dynasty.[34]

In China, there are problems with wildlife conservation, specifically relating to tigers. Several authors collaborated on the piece "Public attitude toward tiger farming and tiger conservation in Beijing, China", and explored the option of whether it would be a better policy to raise tigers on a farm or put them in a wildlife conservation habitat to preserve the species. Conducting a survey on 1,058 residents of Beijing, China, with 381 being university students and the other 677 being regular citizens, they tried to gauge public opinion about tigers and conservation efforts for them. They were asked questions regarding the value of tigers in relations to ecology, science, education, aestheticism, and culture. However, one reason emerged as to why tigers are still highly demanded in illegal trading: culturally, they are still status symbols of wealth for the upper class, and they are still thought to have mysterious medicinal and healthcare effects.[35]

Effects edit

 
Memorial to rhinos killed by poachers near St Lucia Estuary, South Africa

The detrimental effects of poaching can include:

Products edit

 
A seashell vendor in Tanzania sells seashells to tourists, seashells which have been taken from the sea alive, killing the animal inside.

The body parts of many animals, such as tigers and rhinoceroses, are traditionally believed in some cultures to have certain positive effects on the human body, including increasing virility and curing cancer. These parts are sold in areas where these beliefs are practiced – mostly Asian countries particularly Vietnam and China – on the black market.[43] Such alternative medicial beliefs are pseudoscientific and are not supported by evidence-based medicine.[44][45]

 
A vendor selling illegal items at a Chinese market for use in traditional Chinese medicine. Some of the pieces pictured include parts of animals such as a tiger's paw.

Traditional Chinese medicine often incorporates ingredients from all parts of plants, the leaf, stem, flower, root, and also ingredients from animals and minerals. The use of parts of endangered species (such as seahorses, rhinoceros horns, binturong, pangolin scales and tiger bones and claws) has created controversy and resulted in a black market of poachers.[46][47][48] Deep-seated cultural beliefs in the potency of tiger parts are so prevalent across China and other east Asian countries that laws protecting even critically endangered species such as the Sumatran tiger fail to stop the display and sale of these items in open markets, according to a 2008 report from TRAFFIC.[49] Popular "medicinal" tiger parts from poached animals include tiger genitals, believed to improve virility, and tiger eyes.

Rhino populations face extinction because of demand in Asia (for traditional medicine and as a luxury item) and in the Middle East (where horns are used for decoration).[50] A sharp surge in demand for rhino horn in Vietnam was attributed to rumors that the horn cured cancer, though this has no basis in science.[51][52] In 2012, one kilogram of crushed rhino horn has sold for as much as $60,000, more expensive than a kilogram of gold.[53] Vietnam is the only nation which mass-produces bowls made for grinding rhino horn.[54]

Ivory, which is a natural material of several animals, plays a large part in the trade of illegal animal materials and poaching. Ivory is a material used in creating art objects and jewelry where the ivory is carved with designs. China is a consumer of the ivory trade and accounts for a significant amount of ivory sales. In 2012, The New York Times reported on a large upsurge in ivory poaching, with about 70% of all illegal ivory flowing to China.[55][56]

Fur is also a natural material which is sought after by poachers. A Gamsbart, literally chamois beard, a tuft of hair traditionally worn as a decoration on trachten-hats in the alpine regions of Austria and Bavaria formerly was worn as a hunting (and poaching) trophy. In the past, it was made exclusively from hair from the chamois' lower neck.[57]

Anti-poaching efforts edit

There are different anti-poaching efforts around the world.

Africa edit

TRAFFIC brings to light many of the poaching areas and trafficking routes and helps to clamp down on the smuggling routes the poachers use to get the ivory to areas of high demand, predominantly Asia.[58]

As many as 35,000 African elephants[59] are slaughtered yearly to feed the demand for their ivory tusks. This ivory then goes on to be used in jewelry, musical instruments, and other trinkets.

Members of the Rhino Rescue Project have implemented a technique to combat rhino poaching in South Africa by injecting a mixture of indelible dye and a parasiticide into the animals' horns, which enables tracking of the horns and deters consumption of the horn by purchasers. Since rhino horn is made of keratin, advocates say the procedure is painless for the animal.[60]

Another strategy being used to counter rhino poachers in Africa is called RhODIS, which is a database that compiles rhino DNA from confiscated horns and other goods that were being illegally traded, as well as DNA recovered from poaching sites. RhODIS cross-references the DNA as it searches for matches; if a match is found, it is used to track down the poachers.

Africa's Wildlife Trust seeks to protect African elephant populations from poaching activities in Tanzania. Hunting for ivory was banned in 1989, but poaching of elephants continues in many parts of Africa stricken by economic decline. The International Anti-Poaching Foundation has a structured military-like approach to conservation, employing tactics and technology generally reserved for the battlefield. Founder Damien Mander is an advocate of the use of military equipment and tactics, including Unmanned Aerial Vehicles, for military-style anti-poaching operations.[61][62][63] Such military-style approaches have been criticised for failing to resolve the underlying reasons for poaching, but to neither tackle "the role of global trading networks" nor the continued demand for animal products. Instead, they "result in coercive, unjust and counterproductive approaches to wildlife conservation".[64]

Chengeta Wildlife is an organization that works to equip and train wildlife protection teams and lobbies African governments to adopt anti-poaching campaigns.[65]Jim Nyamu's elephant walks are part of attempts in Kenya to reduce ivory poaching.[66]

In 2013, the Tanzanian Minister of Natural Resources and Tourism urged that poachers be shot on sight in an effort to stop the mass killing of elephants.[67] Since December 2016, anti-poaching police units in Namibia are permitted to return fire on poachers if fired upon.[68] The government of Botswana adopted a shoot-to-kill policy against poachers in 2013 as a "legitimate conservation strategy" and "a necessary evil", which has reduced poaching to the point it is thought to be "virtually non-existent" in the country, and that neighbouring countries like South Africa should also adopt similar measures in order to save wildlife from extinction.[69][70] In May 2018, the Kenyan government announced that poachers will face the death penalty, as fines and life imprisonment have "not been deterrence enough to curb poaching, hence the proposed stiffer sentence".[71] Human rights organizations oppose the move, but wildlife advocates support it. Save the Rhino, a UK-based wildlife advocacy organization notes that in Kenya, 23 rhinos and 156 elephants were killed by poachers between 2016 and 2017. As of March 2019, the measure is being put on the fast track to implementation by Kenyan lawmakers.[72]

Asia edit

Large quantities of ivory are sometimes destroyed as a statement against poaching, a.k.a. "ivory crush".[73] In 2013 the Philippines were the first country to destroy their national seized ivory stock.[74] In 2014, China followed suit and crushed six tons of ivory as a symbolic statement against poaching.[75][76]

There are two main solutions according to Frederick Chen that would attack the supply side of this poaching problem to reduce its effects: enforcing and enacting more policies and laws for conservation and by encouraging local communities to protect the wildlife around them by giving them more land rights.[35]

Nonetheless, Frederick Chen wrote about two types of effects stemming from demand-side economics: the bandwagon and snob effect. The former deals with people desiring a product due to many other people buying it, while the latter is similar but with one distinct difference: people will clamour to buy something if it denotes wealth that only a few elites could possibly afford. Therefore, the snob effect would offset some of the gains made by anti-poaching laws, regulations, or practices: if a portion of the supply is cut off, the rarity and price of the object would increase, and only a select few would have the desire and purchasing power for it. While approaches to dilute mitigate poaching from a supply-side may not be the best option as people can become more willing to purchase rarer items, especially in countries gaining more wealth and therefore higher demand for illicit goods—Frederick Chen still advocates that we should also focus on exploring ways to reduce the demand for these goods to better stop the problem of poaching.[77] Indeed, there is some evidence that interventions to reduce consumer demand may be more effective for combatting poaching than continually increased policing to catch poachers.[78] However, almost no groups deploying interventions that attempt to reduce consumer demand evaluate the impact of their actions.[79]

Another solution to alleviate poaching proposed in Tigers of the World was about how to implement a multi-lateral strategy that targets different parties to conserve wild tiger populations in general. This multi-lateral approach include working with different agencies to fight and prevent poaching since organized crime syndicates benefit from tiger poaching and trafficking; therefore, there is a need to raise social awareness and implement more protection and investigative techniques. For example, conservation groups raised more awareness amongst park rangers and the local communities to understand the impact of tiger poaching—they achieved this through targeted advertising that would impact the main audience. Targeting advertising using more violent imagery to show the disparity between tigers in nature and as a commodity made a great impact on the general population to combat poaching and indifference towards this problem. The use of spokespeople such as Jackie Chan and other famous Asian actors and models who advocated against poaching also helped the conservation movement for tigers too.[33]

In July 2019, rhino horns encased in plaster were seized in Vietnam that were being trafficked from the United Arab Emirates. Despite the ban on trade since the 1970s, poaching level of rhino horns has risen over the last decade, leading the rhino population into crisis.[80]

Poaching has many causes in both Africa and China. The issue of poaching is not a simple one to solve as traditional methods to counter poaching have not taken into the account the poverty levels that drive some poachers and the lucrative profits made by organized crime syndicates who deal in illegal wildlife trafficking. Conservationists hope the new emerging multi-lateral approach, which would include the public, conservation groups, and the police, will be successful for the future of these animals.[81][82]

United States edit

Some game wardens have made use of robotic decoy animals placed in high visibility areas to draw out poachers for arrest after the decoys are shot.[83] Decoys with robotics to mimic natural movements are also in use by law enforcement.[84] The Marine Monitor radar system watches sensitive marine areas for illicit vessel movement.[85]

See also edit

References edit

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Further reading edit

  • Jacoby, K. (2001). Crimes against Nature: Squatters, Poachers, Thieves, and the Hidden History of American Conservation. Berkeley: University of California Press. ISBN 9780520282292.
  • Archer, J. E. (1999). "Poaching gangs and violence: the urban-rural divide in nineteenth-century Lancashire". British Journal of Criminology. 39 (1): 25–38. doi:10.1093/bjc/39.1.25.
  • Fisher, J. (2000). "Property rights in pheasants: landlords, farmers and the game laws, 1860–80". Rural History. 11 (2): 165–180. doi:10.1017/s0956793300002089. S2CID 161116889.
  • Gray, D. D. (2016). Crime, Policing and Punishment in England, 1660-1914. Bloomsbury Publishing.
  • Haenlein, C. & Smith, M. L. R. (2017). Poaching, wildlife trafficking and security in Africa: Myths and realities. Routledge.
  • Hopkins, H. (1985). The long affray: the poaching wars, 1760–1914. London: Secker & Warburg.
  • Lemieux, A. M. & Clarke, R. V. (2009). "The international ban on ivory sales and its effects on elephant poaching in Africa". British Journal of Criminology. 49 (4): 451–471. doi:10.1093/bjc/azp030.
  • Liberg, O.; Chapron, G.; Wabakken, P.; Pedersen, H.C.; Hobbs, N.T. & Sand, H. (2011). "Shoot, shovel and shut up: cryptic poaching slows restoration of a large carnivore in Europe". Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences. 279 (1730): 910–915. doi:10.1098/rspb.2011.1275. PMC 3259920. PMID 21849323.
  • Martin, J. (2012). "The Transformation of Lowland Game Shooting in England and Wales in the Twentieth Century: The Neglected Metamorphosis". International Journal of the History of Sport. 29 (8): 1141–1158. doi:10.1080/09523367.2012.690226. S2CID 143591142.
  • Osborne, H. & Winstanley, M. (2006). (PDF). Rural History. 17 (2): 187–212. doi:10.1017/s0956793306001877. S2CID 162704842. Archived from the original (PDF) on 23 September 2020. Retrieved 1 November 2019.
  • Smith, K. & Byrne, R. (2018). "Reimagining rural crime in England: a historical perspective". International Journal of Rural Criminology. 4 (1): 66–85. doi:10.18061/1811/86152.Online
  • Somerville, K. (2017). Ivory: power and poaching in Africa. Oxford University Press.
  • Taylor, A. (2004). "Pig‐Sticking Princes: Royal Hunting, Moral Outrage, and the Republican Opposition to Animal Abuse in Nineteenth‐and Early Twentieth‐Century Britain". History. 89 (293): 30–48. doi:10.1111/j.0018-2648.2004.00286.x.</ref>

External links edit

  •   Media related to Poaching (criminal activity) at Wikimedia Commons

poaching, other, uses, disambiguation, illegal, hunting, redirects, here, making, hunting, illegal, hunting, poacher, redirects, here, other, uses, poacher, disambiguation, illegal, hunting, capturing, wild, animals, usually, associated, with, land, rights, on. For other uses see Poaching disambiguation Illegal hunting redirects here For making hunting illegal see Hunting ban Poacher redirects here For other uses see Poacher disambiguation Poaching is the illegal hunting or capturing of wild animals usually associated with land use rights 1 2 Poaching was once performed by impoverished peasants for subsistence purposes and to supplement meager diets 3 It was set against the hunting privileges of nobility and territorial rulers 4 The Poacher by Frederic Rouge 1867 1950 Since the 1980s the term poaching has also been used to refer to the illegal harvesting of wild plants 5 6 In agricultural terms the term poaching is also applied to the loss of soils or grass by the damaging action of feet of livestock which can affect availability of productive land water pollution through increased runoff and welfare issues for cattle 7 Stealing livestock as in cattle raiding classifies as theft not as poaching 8 The United Nations Sustainable Development Goal 15 enshrines the sustainable use of all wildlife It targets the taking of action on dealing with poaching and trafficking of protected species of flora and fauna to ensure their availability for present and future generations 9 Contents 1 Legal aspects 1 1 Continental Europe 1 2 United Kingdom 1 3 United States 1 4 Africa 2 Motives 3 Effects 4 Products 5 Anti poaching efforts 5 1 Africa 5 2 Asia 5 3 United States 6 See also 7 References 8 Further reading 9 External linksLegal aspects edit nbsp The Poacher 1916 sketch by Tom Thomson Art Gallery of Ontario TorontoIn 1998 environmental scientists from the University of Massachusetts Amherst proposed the concept of poaching as an environmental crime and defined as any illegal activity that contravenes the laws and regulations established to protect renewable natural resources including the illegal harvest of wildlife with the intention of possessing transporting consuming or selling it and using its body parts They considered poaching as one of the most serious threats to the survival of plant and animal populations 6 Wildlife biologists and conservationists consider poaching to have a detrimental effect on biodiversity both within and outside protected areas as wildlife populations decline species are depleted locally and the functionality of ecosystems is disturbed 10 Continental Europe edit nbsp End of the poacher illustration based on a painting by August Dieffenbacher 1894 nbsp Grave of a poacher in Schliersee quoting the first stanza of the Jennerwein song Now and then poached game is being placed on the grave to commemorate Girgl nbsp Marterl at the Riederstein near Baumgartenschneid Tegernsee The remains of a poacher who had never returned from a hunting expedition in 1861 were found at the site in 1897 11 Austria and Germany refer to poaching not as theft but as intrusion into third party hunting rights 12 While ancient Germanic law allowed any free man including peasants to hunt especially on common land Roman law restricted hunting to the rulers In medieval Europe rulers of feudal territories from the king downward tried to enforce exclusive rights of the nobility to hunt and fish on the lands that they ruled Poaching was deemed a serious crime punishable by imprisonment but enforcement was comparably weak until the 16th century Peasants were still allowed to continue small game hunting but the right of the nobility to hunt was restricted in the 16th century and transferred to land ownership The low quality of guns made it necessary to approach the game as close as 30 m 100 ft Poachers in the Salzburg region were typically unmarried men around 30 years of age and usually alone on their illegal trade 13 The development of modern hunting rights is closely connected to the comparatively modern idea of exclusive private ownership of land In the 17th and the 18th centuries the restrictions on hunting and shooting rights on private property were enforced by gamekeepers and foresters They denied shared usage of forests such as resin collection and wood pasture and the peasants right to hunt and fish However by end of the 18th century comparably easy access to rifles increasingly allowed peasants and servants to poach 14 Hunting was used in the 18th century as a theatrical clarification needed demonstration of the aristocratic rule of the land and also had a strong impact on land use patterns 15 Poaching not only interfered with property rights but also clashed symbolically with the power of the nobility Between 1830 and 1848 poaching and poaching related deaths increased in Bavaria 16 The German revolutions of 1848 49 were interpreted as a general permission for poaching in Bavaria The reform of the hunting law in 1849 restricted legal hunting to rich landowners and middle classes who could pay hunting fees which led to disappointment among the general public who continued to view poachers favourably dubious discuss 16 Some of the frontier regions where smuggling was important showed especially strong resistance to that development In 1849 the Bavarian military forces were asked to occupy a number of municipalities on the frontier with Austria Both in Wallgau now part of Garmisch Partenkirchen and in Lackenhauser in the Bavarian forest each household had to feed and accommodate one soldier for a month as part of a military mission to quell the disturbance The people of Lackenhauser had several skirmishes with Austrian foresters and military that started due to poached deer The well armed people set against the representatives of the state were known as bold poachers kecke Wilderer 4 Some poachers and their violent deaths like Matthias Klostermayr 1736 1771 Georg Jennerwein 1848 1877 and Pius Walder 1952 1982 gained notoriety and have had a strong cultural impact which has persisted until today 13 Poaching was used as a dare It had a certain erotic connotation as in Franz Schubert s Hunter s love song 1828 Schubert Thematic Catalogue 909 The lyrics of Franz von Schober connected unlimited hunting with the pursuit of love Further poaching related legends and stories ranged from the 1821 opera Freischutz to Wolfgang Franz von Kobell s 1871 story about the Brandner Kasper a Tegernsee locksmith and poacher who struck a special deal with the Grim Reaper 5 While poachers had strong local support until the early 20th century Walder s case showed a significant change in attitudes Urban citizens still had some sympathy for the hillbilly rebel but the local community were much supportive 12 United Kingdom edit nbsp Brass plaque on door at Tremedda farm dating to 1868 warning that poachers shall be shot on first sightPoaching like smuggling has a long history in United Kingdom The verb poach is derived from the Middle English word pocchen literally meaning bagged enclosed in a bag which is cognate with pouch 17 18 Poaching was dispassionately reported for England in Pleas of the Forest transgressions of the rigid Anglo Norman forest law 19 William the Conqueror who was a great lover of hunting established and enforced a system of forest law That operated outside the common law and served to protect game animals and their forest habitat from hunting by the common people of England and reserved hunting rights for the new French speaking Anglo Norman aristocracy Henceforth hunting of game in royal forests by commoners or in other words poaching was invariably punishable by death by hanging In 1087 the poem The Rime of King William contained in the Peterborough Chronicle expressed English indignation at the severe new laws Poaching was romanticised in literature from the time of the ballads of Robin Hood as an aspect of the greenwood of Merry England In one tale Robin Hood is depicted as offering King Richard the Lion Heart venison from deer that was illegally hunted in the Sherwood Forest the King overlooking the fact that this hunting was a capital offence The widespread acceptance of the common criminal activity is encapsulated in the observation Non est inquirendum unde venit venison It is not to be inquired whence comes the venison that was made by Guillaume Bude in his Traitte de la venerie 20 However the English nobility and land owners were in the long term extremely successful in enforcing the modern concept of property such as expressed in the enclosures of common land and later in the Highland Clearances both of which were forced displacement of people from traditional land tenancies and erstwhile common land The 19th century saw the rise of acts of legislation such as the Night Poaching Act 1828 and the Game Act 1831 in the United Kingdom and various laws elsewhere United States edit nbsp Lady Baltimore a bald eagle in Alaska survived a poaching attempt in the Juneau Raptor Center mews on 15 August 2015In North America the blatant defiance of the laws by poachers escalated to armed conflicts with law authorities including the Oyster Wars of the Chesapeake Bay and the joint US British Bering Sea Anti Poaching Operations of 1891 over the hunting of seals Violations of hunting laws and regulations concerning wildlife management local or international wildlife conservation schemes constitute wildlife crimes that are typically punishable 21 22 The following violations and offenses are considered acts of poaching in the US Hunting killing or collecting wildlife that is listed as endangered by the IUCN and protected by law such as the Endangered Species Act the Migratory Bird Treaty Act of 1918 and international treaties such as CITES 21 Fishing and hunting without a license 22 23 Capturing wildlife outside legal hours and outside the hunting season 21 22 usually the breeding season is declared as the closed season during which wildlife is protected by law Prohibited use of machine guns poison explosives snare traps nets and pitfall traps 21 Other offenses of incorrect weaponry such as the use of cartridge rifles in muzzleloader or archery season or in shotgun only areas or the killing of big game animals with insufficient firepower such as 22 Long Rifle rounds Prohibited use of baiting with food decoys or recorded calls in order to increase chances for shooting wildlife 21 Hunting from a moving vehicle or aircraft 21 Scouting game animals from an aircraft Shining deer with a spotlight at night to impair its natural defenses and thus facilitate an easy kill is considered animal abuse 24 This hunting method is illegal in California Virginia Connecticut Florida Michigan and Tennessee 21 Taking wildlife on land that is restricted owned by or licensed to somebody else The animal or plant has been tagged by a researcher Shooting an animal in a confined area canned hunting Africa edit Stephen Corry the director of the human rights group Survival International has argued that the term poaching has at times been used to criminalize the traditional subsistence techniques of indigenous peoples and to bar them from hunting on their ancestral lands when they are declared as wildlife only zones 25 Corry argues that parks such as the Central Kalahari Game Reserve are managed for the benefit of foreign tourists and safari groups at the expense of the livelihoods of tribal peoples such as the Kalahari bushmen 26 Motives editSociological and criminological research on poaching indicates that in North America people poach for commercial gain home consumption trophies pleasure and thrill in killing wildlife or because they disagree with certain hunting regulations claim a traditional right to hunt or have negative dispositions toward legal authority 6 In rural areas of the United States the key motives for poaching are poverty 27 Interviews conducted with 41 poachers in the Atchafalaya River basin in Louisiana revealed that 37 of them hunt to provide food for themselves and their families 11 stated that poaching is part of their personal or cultural history nine earn money from the sale of poached game to support their families and eight feel exhilarated and thrilled by outsmarting game wardens 28 In rural areas in Africa the key motives for poaching are the lack of employment opportunities and a limited potential for agriculture and livestock production Poor people rely on natural resources for their survival and generate cash income through the sale of bushmeat which attracts high prices in urban centres Body parts of wildlife are also in demand for traditional medicine and ceremonies 10 The existence of an international market for poached wildlife implies that well organised gangs of professional poachers enter vulnerable areas to hunt and crime syndicates organise the trafficking of wildlife body parts through a complex interlinking network to markets outside the respective countries of origin 29 30 Armed conflict in Africa has been linked to intensified poaching and wildlife declines within protected areas 31 likely reflecting the disruption of traditional livelihoods which causes people to seek alternative food sources Results of an interview survey conducted in several villages in Tanzania indicate that one of the major reasons of poaching is for consumption and sale of bushmeat Usually bushmeat is considered a subset of poaching because of the hunting of animals regardless of the laws that conserve certain species of animals Many families consume more bushmeat if there are no alternative sources of protein available such as fish The further the families were from the reserve the less likely they were to illegally hunt wildlife for bushmeat They were more likely to hunt for bushmeat right before the harvest season and during heavy rains as before the harvest season there is not much agricultural work and heavy rainfall obscures human tracks and makes it easier for poachers to get away with their crimes 32 Poverty seems to be a large impetus to cause people to poach something that affects both residents in Africa and Asia For example in Thailand there are anecdotal accounts of the desire for a better life for children which drive rural poachers to take the risk of poaching even though they dislike exploiting the wildlife 33 Another major cause of poaching is the cultural high demand of wildlife products such as ivory which are seen as symbols of status and wealth in China According to Joseph Vandegrift China saw an unusual spike in demand for ivory in the 21st century because the economic boom allowed more middle class Chinese to have a higher purchasing power which incentivized them to show off their newfound wealth by using ivory which has been a rare commodity since the Han dynasty 34 In China there are problems with wildlife conservation specifically relating to tigers Several authors collaborated on the piece Public attitude toward tiger farming and tiger conservation in Beijing China and explored the option of whether it would be a better policy to raise tigers on a farm or put them in a wildlife conservation habitat to preserve the species Conducting a survey on 1 058 residents of Beijing China with 381 being university students and the other 677 being regular citizens they tried to gauge public opinion about tigers and conservation efforts for them They were asked questions regarding the value of tigers in relations to ecology science education aestheticism and culture However one reason emerged as to why tigers are still highly demanded in illegal trading culturally they are still status symbols of wealth for the upper class and they are still thought to have mysterious medicinal and healthcare effects 35 Effects edit nbsp Memorial to rhinos killed by poachers near St Lucia Estuary South AfricaFurther information Species affected by poaching The detrimental effects of poaching can include Defaunation of forests predators herbivores and fruit eating vertebrates cannot recover as fast as they are removed from a forest as their populations decline the pattern of seed predation and dispersal is altered tree species with large seeds progressively dominate a forest while small seeded plant species become locally extinct 36 Reduction of animal populations in the wild and possible extinction 37 The effective size of protected areas is reduced as poachers use the edges of these areas as open access resources 38 Wildlife tourism destinations face a negative publicity those holding a permit for wildlife based land uses tourism based tour and lodging operators lose income employment opportunities are reduced 10 Emergence of zoonotic diseases caused by transmission of highly variable retrovirus chains Outbreaks of the Ebola virus in the Congo Basin and in Gabon in the 1990s have been associated with the butchering of apes and consumption of their meat 39 The outbreak of SARS in Hong Kong is attributed to contact with and consumption of meat from masked palm civets raccoon dogs Chinese ferret badgers and other small carnivores that are available in southern Chinese wildlife markets 40 Bushmeat hunters in Central Africa infected with the human T lymphotropic virus were closely exposed to wild primates 41 Results of research on wild central chimpanzees in Cameroon indicate that they are naturally infected with the simian foamy virus and constitute a reservoir of HIV 1 a precursor of the acquired immunodeficiency syndrome in humans 42 Products edit nbsp A seashell vendor in Tanzania sells seashells to tourists seashells which have been taken from the sea alive killing the animal inside The body parts of many animals such as tigers and rhinoceroses are traditionally believed in some cultures to have certain positive effects on the human body including increasing virility and curing cancer These parts are sold in areas where these beliefs are practiced mostly Asian countries particularly Vietnam and China on the black market 43 Such alternative medicial beliefs are pseudoscientific and are not supported by evidence based medicine 44 45 nbsp A vendor selling illegal items at a Chinese market for use in traditional Chinese medicine Some of the pieces pictured include parts of animals such as a tiger s paw Traditional Chinese medicine often incorporates ingredients from all parts of plants the leaf stem flower root and also ingredients from animals and minerals The use of parts of endangered species such as seahorses rhinoceros horns binturong pangolin scales and tiger bones and claws has created controversy and resulted in a black market of poachers 46 47 48 Deep seated cultural beliefs in the potency of tiger parts are so prevalent across China and other east Asian countries that laws protecting even critically endangered species such as the Sumatran tiger fail to stop the display and sale of these items in open markets according to a 2008 report from TRAFFIC 49 Popular medicinal tiger parts from poached animals include tiger genitals believed to improve virility and tiger eyes Rhino populations face extinction because of demand in Asia for traditional medicine and as a luxury item and in the Middle East where horns are used for decoration 50 A sharp surge in demand for rhino horn in Vietnam was attributed to rumors that the horn cured cancer though this has no basis in science 51 52 In 2012 one kilogram of crushed rhino horn has sold for as much as 60 000 more expensive than a kilogram of gold 53 Vietnam is the only nation which mass produces bowls made for grinding rhino horn 54 Ivory which is a natural material of several animals plays a large part in the trade of illegal animal materials and poaching Ivory is a material used in creating art objects and jewelry where the ivory is carved with designs China is a consumer of the ivory trade and accounts for a significant amount of ivory sales In 2012 The New York Times reported on a large upsurge in ivory poaching with about 70 of all illegal ivory flowing to China 55 56 Fur is also a natural material which is sought after by poachers A Gamsbart literally chamois beard a tuft of hair traditionally worn as a decoration on trachten hats in the alpine regions of Austria and Bavaria formerly was worn as a hunting and poaching trophy In the past it was made exclusively from hair from the chamois lower neck 57 Anti poaching efforts editThere are different anti poaching efforts around the world Africa edit TRAFFIC brings to light many of the poaching areas and trafficking routes and helps to clamp down on the smuggling routes the poachers use to get the ivory to areas of high demand predominantly Asia 58 As many as 35 000 African elephants 59 are slaughtered yearly to feed the demand for their ivory tusks This ivory then goes on to be used in jewelry musical instruments and other trinkets Members of the Rhino Rescue Project have implemented a technique to combat rhino poaching in South Africa by injecting a mixture of indelible dye and a parasiticide into the animals horns which enables tracking of the horns and deters consumption of the horn by purchasers Since rhino horn is made of keratin advocates say the procedure is painless for the animal 60 Another strategy being used to counter rhino poachers in Africa is called RhODIS which is a database that compiles rhino DNA from confiscated horns and other goods that were being illegally traded as well as DNA recovered from poaching sites RhODIS cross references the DNA as it searches for matches if a match is found it is used to track down the poachers Africa s Wildlife Trust seeks to protect African elephant populations from poaching activities in Tanzania Hunting for ivory was banned in 1989 but poaching of elephants continues in many parts of Africa stricken by economic decline The International Anti Poaching Foundation has a structured military like approach to conservation employing tactics and technology generally reserved for the battlefield Founder Damien Mander is an advocate of the use of military equipment and tactics including Unmanned Aerial Vehicles for military style anti poaching operations 61 62 63 Such military style approaches have been criticised for failing to resolve the underlying reasons for poaching but to neither tackle the role of global trading networks nor the continued demand for animal products Instead they result in coercive unjust and counterproductive approaches to wildlife conservation 64 Chengeta Wildlife is an organization that works to equip and train wildlife protection teams and lobbies African governments to adopt anti poaching campaigns 65 Jim Nyamu s elephant walks are part of attempts in Kenya to reduce ivory poaching 66 In 2013 the Tanzanian Minister of Natural Resources and Tourism urged that poachers be shot on sight in an effort to stop the mass killing of elephants 67 Since December 2016 anti poaching police units in Namibia are permitted to return fire on poachers if fired upon 68 The government of Botswana adopted a shoot to kill policy against poachers in 2013 as a legitimate conservation strategy and a necessary evil which has reduced poaching to the point it is thought to be virtually non existent in the country and that neighbouring countries like South Africa should also adopt similar measures in order to save wildlife from extinction 69 70 In May 2018 the Kenyan government announced that poachers will face the death penalty as fines and life imprisonment have not been deterrence enough to curb poaching hence the proposed stiffer sentence 71 Human rights organizations oppose the move but wildlife advocates support it Save the Rhino a UK based wildlife advocacy organization notes that in Kenya 23 rhinos and 156 elephants were killed by poachers between 2016 and 2017 As of March 2019 the measure is being put on the fast track to implementation by Kenyan lawmakers 72 Asia edit Large quantities of ivory are sometimes destroyed as a statement against poaching a k a ivory crush 73 In 2013 the Philippines were the first country to destroy their national seized ivory stock 74 In 2014 China followed suit and crushed six tons of ivory as a symbolic statement against poaching 75 76 There are two main solutions according to Frederick Chen that would attack the supply side of this poaching problem to reduce its effects enforcing and enacting more policies and laws for conservation and by encouraging local communities to protect the wildlife around them by giving them more land rights 35 Nonetheless Frederick Chen wrote about two types of effects stemming from demand side economics the bandwagon and snob effect The former deals with people desiring a product due to many other people buying it while the latter is similar but with one distinct difference people will clamour to buy something if it denotes wealth that only a few elites could possibly afford Therefore the snob effect would offset some of the gains made by anti poaching laws regulations or practices if a portion of the supply is cut off the rarity and price of the object would increase and only a select few would have the desire and purchasing power for it While approaches to dilute mitigate poaching from a supply side may not be the best option as people can become more willing to purchase rarer items especially in countries gaining more wealth and therefore higher demand for illicit goods Frederick Chen still advocates that we should also focus on exploring ways to reduce the demand for these goods to better stop the problem of poaching 77 Indeed there is some evidence that interventions to reduce consumer demand may be more effective for combatting poaching than continually increased policing to catch poachers 78 However almost no groups deploying interventions that attempt to reduce consumer demand evaluate the impact of their actions 79 Another solution to alleviate poaching proposed in Tigers of the World was about how to implement a multi lateral strategy that targets different parties to conserve wild tiger populations in general This multi lateral approach include working with different agencies to fight and prevent poaching since organized crime syndicates benefit from tiger poaching and trafficking therefore there is a need to raise social awareness and implement more protection and investigative techniques For example conservation groups raised more awareness amongst park rangers and the local communities to understand the impact of tiger poaching they achieved this through targeted advertising that would impact the main audience Targeting advertising using more violent imagery to show the disparity between tigers in nature and as a commodity made a great impact on the general population to combat poaching and indifference towards this problem The use of spokespeople such as Jackie Chan and other famous Asian actors and models who advocated against poaching also helped the conservation movement for tigers too 33 In July 2019 rhino horns encased in plaster were seized in Vietnam that were being trafficked from the United Arab Emirates Despite the ban on trade since the 1970s poaching level of rhino horns has risen over the last decade leading the rhino population into crisis 80 Poaching has many causes in both Africa and China The issue of poaching is not a simple one to solve as traditional methods to counter poaching have not taken into the account the poverty levels that drive some poachers and the lucrative profits made by organized crime syndicates who deal in illegal wildlife trafficking Conservationists hope the new emerging multi lateral approach which would include the public conservation groups and the police will be successful for the future of these animals 81 82 United States edit Some game wardens have made use of robotic decoy animals placed in high visibility areas to draw out poachers for arrest after the decoys are shot 83 Decoys with robotics to mimic natural movements are also in use by law enforcement 84 The Marine Monitor radar system watches sensitive marine areas for illicit vessel movement 85 See also edit nbsp Animals portal nbsp Ecology portalAfrican vulture trade Anti poaching Cruelty to animals Environmental crime Federal and state environmental relations Game law Game preservation Illegal unreported and unregulated fishing Ivory trade Rhino poaching in Southern Africa Species affected by poaching Tiger poaching in India Wildlife tradeReferences edit Poaching Random House Webster s Unabridged Dictionary 2nd ed New York Random House 2002 ISBN 978 0 375 42599 8 Poaching World book Encyclopedia Vol 15 Springfield Merriam Webster Inc 2005 Poaching Encyclopaedia Britannica 15th ed Encyclopaedia Britannica Inc 2010 Retrieved 18 August 2013 a b Krauss M 1997 Die Konfrontation mit dem traditionalen Rechtsverstandnis Raub Holzdiebstahl Lebensmitteltumult Herrschaftspraxis in Bayern und Preussen im 19 Jahrhundert ein historischer Vergleich in German Frankfurt New York Campus Verlag pp 321 352 ISBN 9783593358499 Power Bratton S 1985 Effects of disturbance by visitors on two woodland orchid species in Great Smoky Mountains National Park USA Biological Conservation 31 3 211 227 doi 10 1016 0006 3207 85 90068 0 a b c Muth R M Bowe Jr 1998 Illegal harvest of renewable natural resources in North America Toward a typology of the motivations for poaching Society amp Natural Resources 11 1 9 24 doi 10 1080 08941929809381058 Cuttle S P 2008 Impacts of Pastoral Grazing on Soil Quality In McDowell R W ed Environmental Impacts of Pasture based Farming Centre for Agriculture and Biosciences International pp 36 38 ISBN 978 1 84593 411 8 Retrieved 19 February 2016 August R 1993 Cowboys v Rancheros The Origins of Western American Livestock Law Southwestern Historical Quarterly 96 4 457 490 Goal 15 targets Archived from the original on 4 September 2017 Retrieved 24 September 2020 a b c Lindsey P Balme G Becker M Begg C Bento C Bocchino C Dickman A Diggle R Eves H Henschel P Lewis D Marnewick K Mattheus J McNutt J W McRobb R Midlane N Milanzi J Morley R Murphree M Nyoni P Opyene V Phadima J Purchase N Rentsch D Roche C Shaw J van der Westhuizen H Van Vliet N Zisadza P 2012 Illegal hunting and the bush meat trade in savanna Africa drivers impacts and solutions to address the problem New York Panthera Zoological Society of London Wildlife Conservation Society a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Bauer D 2013 Leonhard Pottinger Berg und Totschlag Poettinger mountain and murder bergundtotschlag wordpress com Retrieved 10 September 2016 a b Girtler R 1998 Wilderer Rebellen in den Bergen in German Wien Bohlau Verlag ISBN 9783205988236 a b Rebellen der Berge Rebels of the mountains Bayerische Staatszeitung 2014 Retrieved 10 September 2016 Zuckert H 2003 Allmende und Allmendaufhebung vergleichende Studien zum Spatmittelalter bis Zu den Agrarreformen des 18 19 Jahrhunderts in German Lucius amp Lucius ISBN 9783828202269 Sehepunkte Rezension von Ebersberg oder das Ende der Wildnis Ausgabe 4 2004 Nr 2 review of Rainer Beck Ebersberg oder das Ende der Wildnis Ebersberg and the end of wilderness 2003 www sehepunkte de Retrieved 10 September 2016 a b Freitag W 2013 Wilderei Historisches Lexikon Bayerns poaching entry in the Bavarian historical encyclopedia www historisches lexikon bayerns de Archived from the original on 14 September 2016 Retrieved 10 September 2016 McKean E ed 2005 Poaching The new Oxford American dictionary New York Oxford University Press Archived from the original on 28 September 2013 Retrieved 18 August 2013 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a author has generic name help Merriam Webster Inc 2003 Poaching The Merriam Webster Unabridged Dictionary Springfield Merriam Webster Inc Retrieved 18 August 2013 Wrottesley G 1884 Staffordshire Forest Pleas Introduction Staffordshire Historical Collections 5 1 123 135 Bude G 1861 Traitte de la venerie Auguste Aubry Paris Reported by Sir Walter Scott The Fortunes of Nigel Ch 31 The knave deer stealers have an apt phrase Non est inquirendum unde venit venison Henry Thoreau and Simon Schama Landscape and Memory 1995 137 reporting William Gilpin Remarks on Forest Scenery a b c d e f g Musgrave R S Parker S and Wolok M 1993 Status of Poaching in the United States Are We Protecting Our Wildlife Natural Resources Journal 33 4 977 1014 a b c Oldfield S ed 2002 The Trade in Wildlife Regulation for Conservation Earthscan Publications Ltd London Eliason S 2003 Illegal hunting and angling The neutralization of wildlife law violations Society amp Animals 11 3 225 244 doi 10 1163 156853003322773032 S2CID 143410598 Green G S 2002 The other criminalities of animal freeze killers Support for a generality of deviance Society amp Animals 10 1 5 30 doi 10 1163 156853002760030851 Harvey Gemima 1 October 2015 Indigenous Communities and Biodiversity The Diplomat Smith Oliver 1 October 2010 Tourists urged to boycott Botswana The Telegraph London Weisheit R A Falcone D N Wells L E 1994 Rural Crime and Policing PDF U S Department of Justice Office of Justice Programs National Institute of Justice Retrieved 9 August 2013 Forsyth C J Gramling R Wooddell G 1998 The game of poaching Folk crimes in southwest Louisiana Society amp Natural Resources 11 1 25 38 doi 10 1080 08941929809381059 Banks D Lawson S amp Wright B 2006 Skinning the Cat Crime and Politics of the Big Cat Skin Trade PDF Report London New Delhi Environmental Investigation Agency Wildlife Protection Society of India Milliken T amp Shaw J 2012 The South Africa Viet Nam Rhino Horn Trade Nexus A deadly combination of institutional lapses corrupt wildlife industry professionals and Asian crime syndicates PDF Report Johannesburg South Africa TRAFFIC Daskin J H amp Pringle R M 2018 Warfare and wildlife declines in Africa s protected areas Nature 553 7688 328 332 Bibcode 2018Natur 553 328D doi 10 1038 nature25194 PMID 29320475 S2CID 4464877 MacColl A amp Wilfred P 2015 Local Perspectives on Factors Influencing the Extent of Wildlife Poaching for Bushmeat in a Game Reserve Western Tanzania International Journal of Conservation Science 6 1 99 110 a b Nyhus P J 2010 Tigers of the World Second ed Academic Press p 118 ISBN 978 0 8155 1570 8 Vandergrift J 2013 Elephant Poaching CITES Failure to Combat the Growth in Chinese Demand for Ivory Virginia Environmental Law Journal 31 1 102 135 JSTOR 44679553 a b Liu Z Jiang Z Li C Fang H Ping X Luo Z Tang S Li L Meng Z amp Zeng Y 2015 Public attitude toward tiger farming and tiger conservation in Beijing China Animal Conservation 18 4 367 376 doi 10 1111 acv 12181 S2CID 54699266 Redford K 1992 The Empty Forest PDF BioScience 42 6 412 422 doi 10 2307 1311860 JSTOR 1311860 Archived from the original PDF on 11 November 2013 Harrison R Sreekar R Brodie J F Brook S et al Impacts of hunting on tropical forests in Southeast Asia Conservation Biology Vol 30 No 5 2016 pp 972 981 1 Dobson A Lynes L 2008 How does poaching affect the size of national parks Trends in Ecology and Evolution 23 4 177 180 doi 10 1016 j tree 2007 08 019 PMID 18313793 Georges Courbot M C Sanchez A Lu C Y Baize S Leroy E Lansout Soukate J Tevi Benissan C Georges A J Trappier S G Zaki S R Swanepoel R Leman P A Rollin P E Peters C J Nichol S T Ksiazek T G 1997 Isolation and phylogenetic characterization of Ebola viruses causing different outbreaks in Gabon Emerging Infectious Diseases 3 1 59 62 doi 10 3201 eid0301 970107 PMC 2627600 PMID 9126445 Bell D Roberton S Hunter P R 2004 Animal origins of SARS coronavirus possible links with the international trade in small carnivores Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London Series B Biological Sciences 359 1447 1107 1114 doi 10 1098 rstb 2004 1492 PMC 1693393 PMID 15306396 Wolfe N D Heneine W Carr J K Garcia A D Shanmugam V Tamoufe U Torimiro J N Prosser A T Lebreton M Mpoudi Ngole E McCutchan F E Birx D L Folks T M Burke D S Switzer W M 2005 Emergence of unique primate T lymphotropic viruses among central African bushmeat hunters Proceedings of the National Academy of 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value of wildlife A green cultural criminological perspective Theoretical Criminology 22 3 384 401 doi 10 1177 1362480618787170 PMC 6120127 PMID 30245576 Weirum B K 11 November 2007 Will traditional Chinese medicine mean the end of the wild tiger San Francisco Chronicle Rhino rescue plan decimates Asian antelopes Newscientist com Archived from the original on 17 May 2013 Retrieved 18 March 2010 Wednesday 13 February 2008 Traffic org Traffic org Retrieved 8 August 2014 Norgaard Kim 15 November 2011 Rhino horn trade triggers extinction threat CNN Retrieved 8 August 2014 Jonathan Watts in Hong Kong 25 November 2011 article November 2011 Guardian London Retrieved 8 August 2014 Wildlife 8 September 2012 Telegraph article Rhinos under 24 hour armed guard Sept 2012 London Telegraph co uk Archived from the original on 9 September 2012 Retrieved 8 August 2014 Randall David Owen Jonathan 29 April 2012 Slaughter of rhinos at record high London Independent co uk Retrieved 8 August 2014 David Smith in Johannesburg 4 September 2012 Rhino horn Vietnam s new status symbol heralds conservation nightmare Guardian September 2012 Guardian London Retrieved 8 August 2014 Gettleman Jeffrey 3 September 2012 Elephants Dying in Epic Frenzy as Ivory Fuels Wars and Profits The New York Times Gettleman Jeffrey 26 December 2012 In Gabon Lure of Ivory Is Hard for Many to Resist The New York Times Girtler R 1996 Randkulturen Theorie der Unanstandigkeit in German Wien Bohlau Verlag ISBN 9783205985594 TRAFFIC Wildlife trade specialists www traffic org Retrieved 10 January 2019 African elephants Angler M 2013 Dye and Poison Stop Rhino Poachers Scientific American retrieved 8 August 2013 Dunn M 2012 Ex soldier takes on poachers with hi tech help for wildlife Herald Sun Mander D 2013 Rise of the drones PDF Africa Geographic February 52 55 Archived from the original PDF on 2 April 2015 Jacobs H 2013 The Eco Warrior Archived 17 March 2014 at the Wayback Machine Australia Unlimited 19 April 2013 Duffy R 2014 Waging a war to save biodiversity the rise of militarized conservation PDF International Affairs 90 4 819 834 doi 10 1111 1468 2346 12142 African Elephants May Be Extinct By 2020 Because People Keep Eating With Ivory Chopsticks huffingtonpost com 30 July 2014 2 Strategies for success in the ivory war The Guardian Paula Kahumbu 2015 Smith D 2013 Execute elephant poachers on the spot Tanzanian minister urges The Guardian Retrieved 29 December 2016 Smith J M 2016 No mercy for poachers Namibian Sun Retrieved 30 December 2016 Mogomotsi G Kefilwe Madigele P 2017 Live by the gun die by the gun An Analysis of Botswana s shoot to kill policy as an anti poaching strategy South African Crime Quarterly 60 doi 10 17159 2413 3108 2017 v0n60a1787 Carnie T 2017 Should rangers be allowed to kill poachers on sight Yes researchers say The Herald South Africa Retrieved 20 July 2017 Dalton J 2018 Wildlife poachers in Kenya to face death penalty The Independent Retrieved 3 April 2019 Chavez H 2019 Kenya s Poachers To Face Execution For Killing Treasured Species Inquisitr Retrieved 3 April 2019 U S Ivory Crush PDF U S Fish amp Wildlife Service 2013 Retrieved 1 February 2014 In Global First Philippines to Destroy Its Ivory Stock National Geographic 18 June 2013 Archived from the original on 20 June 2013 Retrieved 1 February 2014 China Crushes Six Tons of Confiscated Elephant Ivory National Geographic 2014 Archived from the original on 10 January 2014 Retrieved 1 February 2014 China crushes six tons of ivory The Guardian 2014 Retrieved 1 February 2014 Chen F 2016 Poachers and Snobs Demand for Rarity and the Effects of Antipoaching Policies Conservation Letters 9 1 65 69 doi 10 1111 conl 12181 ISSN 1755 263X Holden M H Biggs D Brink H Bal P Rhodes J amp McDonald Madden E 2018 Increase anti poaching law enforcement or reduce demand for wildlife products A framework to guide strategic conservation investments Conservation Letters 12 3 e12618 doi 10 1111 conl 12618 Verissimo D amp Wan A K Y 2019 Characterizing efforts to reduce consumer demand for wildlife products Conservation Biology 33 3 623 633 doi 10 1111 cobi 13227 PMID 30259569 S2CID 52842222 Vietnam seizes 125kg of rhino horn worth 6m concealed in plaster shipment The Telegraph Archived from the original on 12 January 2022 Retrieved 29 July 2019 USAID PROTECT and USAID Wildlife Asia Combating Illegal Wildlife Trafficking RTI International 2018 Retrieved 22 April 2020 Partnership against Poaching and Illegal Wildlife Trade in Africa and Asia Deutsche Gesellschaft fur Internationale Zusammenarbeit GIZ GmbH Retrieved 22 April 2020 Jones M 2001 Animal robots help enforce hunting laws Milwaukee Journal Sentinel Neal M Poachers are still getting duped into shooting robot Deer Motherboard Vice Archived from the original on 2 June 2016 Retrieved 12 April 2016 MPA Protection Mission Isla de la Plata Machalilla National Park Ecuador Global Conservation 8 February 2019 Retrieved 17 March 2020 Further reading editJacoby K 2001 Crimes against Nature Squatters Poachers Thieves and the Hidden History of American Conservation Berkeley University of California Press ISBN 9780520282292 Archer J E 1999 Poaching gangs and violence the urban rural divide in nineteenth century Lancashire British Journal of Criminology 39 1 25 38 doi 10 1093 bjc 39 1 25 Fisher J 2000 Property rights in pheasants landlords farmers and the game laws 1860 80 Rural History 11 2 165 180 doi 10 1017 s0956793300002089 S2CID 161116889 Gray D D 2016 Crime Policing and Punishment in England 1660 1914 Bloomsbury Publishing Haenlein C amp Smith M L R 2017 Poaching wildlife trafficking and security in Africa Myths and realities Routledge Hopkins H 1985 The long affray the poaching wars 1760 1914 London Secker amp Warburg Lemieux A M amp Clarke R V 2009 The international ban on ivory sales and its effects on elephant poaching in Africa British Journal of Criminology 49 4 451 471 doi 10 1093 bjc azp030 Liberg O Chapron G Wabakken P Pedersen H C Hobbs N T amp Sand H 2011 Shoot shovel and shut up cryptic poaching slows restoration of a large carnivore in Europe Proceedings of the Royal Society B Biological Sciences 279 1730 910 915 doi 10 1098 rspb 2011 1275 PMC 3259920 PMID 21849323 Martin J 2012 The Transformation of Lowland Game Shooting in England and Wales in the Twentieth Century The Neglected Metamorphosis International Journal of the History of Sport 29 8 1141 1158 doi 10 1080 09523367 2012 690226 S2CID 143591142 Osborne H amp Winstanley M 2006 Rural and urban poaching in Victorian England PDF Rural History 17 2 187 212 doi 10 1017 s0956793306001877 S2CID 162704842 Archived from the original PDF on 23 September 2020 Retrieved 1 November 2019 Smith K amp Byrne R 2018 Reimagining rural crime in England a historical perspective International Journal of Rural Criminology 4 1 66 85 doi 10 18061 1811 86152 Online Somerville K 2017 Ivory power and poaching in Africa Oxford University Press Taylor A 2004 Pig Sticking Princes Royal Hunting Moral Outrage and the Republican Opposition to Animal Abuse in Nineteenth and Early Twentieth Century Britain History 89 293 30 48 doi 10 1111 j 0018 2648 2004 00286 x lt ref gt External links edit nbsp Media related to Poaching criminal activity at Wikimedia Commons Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Poaching amp oldid 1186574316, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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