New project aims to transform how wildlife trade is monitored and managed

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Dan Challender
Amy Hinsley
Lauren Coad
4 minutes read

This article was originally posted on https://www.biology.ox.ac.uk/news

The University of Oxford will play a leading role in a new project to develop indicators to measure progress towards globally agreed conservation targets, backed by $1.9 million funding from The Global Environment Facility (GEF). The project is one of seven winners of the GEF’s first Innovation Window, which will provide $12.3 million in grants.

Unsustainable wildlife use and trade imperils thousands of species and is a major contributor towards current unprecedented rates of global biodiversity loss. Establishing effective controls on wildlife trade is an urgent priority, however this is hindered by rapidly evolving markets, opaque supply chains, and inadequate resources for enforcement.

This new collaboration, led by the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN), will focus on filling the critical gap in indicators of unsustainable and sustainable wildlife use and trade. This will be done by using cutting-edge approaches to integrate big data from social media, trade statistics, and biodiversity databases. The aim is to develop novel and transformative wildlife use and trade indicators and standardised monitoring frameworks, which will greatly enhance global capacity and efforts to ensure that trade in wildlife at different scales is sustainable.

Researchers in the Oxford team will contribute to developing new frameworks and indicators and will then apply these to answer questions such as to what extent are conservation efforts mitigating the threat to species from overexploitation for international trade? Oxford researchers will also play a role in taking the developed indicators to policymakers in the Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD) and Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species (CITES) to support their adoption.

Oxford lead on the project Dr Dan Challender (Department of Biology) commented:

“This is an exciting project. We have an opportunity to develop novel indicators to help the world’s government track progress towards globally agreed targets and goals relating to the (un)sustainable use and trade of wildlife. We are looking forward to working with Parties to the CBD and CITES to develop the indicators that are most needed.”

The project builds on Oxford’s expertise in using interdisciplinary approaches to understand threats to wildlife, design effective wildlife trade interventions, and evaluate actions. This includes research to understand how many species are likely threatened by international trade, and the recent demonstration that patent data could provide a novel means to identify future commercial trends associated with the overharvesting of wildlife for trade.

Dr Lauren Coad (Department of Biology and CIFOR-ICRAF) said:

“Wildlife provides a crucial source of food and income for many rural communities across the globe. However, increasing urban demand for wildlife products has led to unsustainable levels of hunting, threatening numerous species and leading to changes in ecosystem function. This has negative impacts on wildlife survival, local cultures, and food security. Accessible knowledge on wildlife populations and wildlife use and trade are crucial for developing effective sustainable management approaches at the local to international levels.”

The Innovation Window program was launched by the GEF to support and help road-test novel approaches, tools, and business models for complex problems related to biodiversity, climate change, pollution, and inter-related areas, engaging new and varied partners.

The seven winning projects were chosen from an initial pool of 128 applications and cover a wide range of issues in finance, behaviour change, systems transformation, technology, and tools.

The partners in this project are IUCN (lead), University of Oxford, University of Helsinki, University of Cambridge, United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC), United Nations Environment Programme-World Conservation Monitoring Centre (UNEP-WCMC), International Institute for Environment and Development (IIED), Zoological Society of London (ZSL), and TRAFFIC.

Author

Dan Challender | Senior Research Fellow
I am an inter-disciplinary Conservation Scientist interested in wildlife trade and use, its sustainability, governance, and economics, including human behaviour, and pangolins and their conservation.

I completed my PhD on reforming the CITES Convention, at DICE, University of Kent, UK in 2014.

I subsequently worked for the IUCN Secretariat where I led the organisation’s contribution to CITES and broader illegal wildlife trade work, prior to joining the University of Oxford. In 2012, I re-formed the IUCN SSC Pangolin Specialist Group and served as Chair of the group until early 2021.

Author

Amy Hinsley | Research Fellow
Since an undergraduate project on orchids taught me about the huge lengths that fanatical 19th century orchid collectors would go to to get rare plants, I have been interested in the reasons why people choose to collect, trade and buy wildlife products. This led to me study the collection of plants in Cambodia for my MSc dissertation, and the use of the internet by traders and buyers in the international orchid trade for my PhD.

As well as academic research I have also worked for conservation organisations for several years in a range of roles, including reviewing grant applications, working on FFI Global Trees Campaign projects for threatened tree species, and analysing the UNEP-WCMC CITES Trade Database to inform policy makers.

Author

Lauren Coad | Research Fellow
While my initial degree was in Marine and Environmental Biology, my PhD focussed on the social and economic uses of wild meat (wildlife used primary for food) by local communities in Gabon, and my experiences in Gabon led my interests to shift quickly from ecology towards people and their governance of natural resources. Following my PhD I worked for UNEP-WCMC, in the Protected Areas (PA) programme, where I investigated the costs and benefits of PAs on local livelihoods, and the impact of different elements of PA management on PA effectiveness. I then completed a 3-year post-doc with the Governance Group of the Environmental Change Institute at Oxford, where I conducted further field studies on wildmeat use by local communities in Gabon, and desk-studies of the effectiveness of different local-level strategies aiming to increase the sustainability of wildmeat use. After my post-doc I moved to Cambodia for a few years, during which time I conducted research on wildmeat use by local communities in the Cardamom mountains, as part of a project with FFI. I currently work as a Research Fellow with ICCS and with the Centre for International Forestry Research (CIFOR).