Home and hub: pet trade and traditional medicine impact reptile populations in source locations and destinations
The pet trade and Traditional Chinese Medicine (TCM) consumption are major drivers of global biodiversity loss. Tokay geckos (Gekko gecko) are among the most traded reptile species worldwide. In Hong Kong, pet and TCM markets sell tokay geckos while wild populations also persist. To clarify connecti...
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Zusammenfassung: | The pet trade and Traditional Chinese Medicine (TCM) consumption are major
drivers of global biodiversity loss. Tokay geckos (Gekko gecko) are among
the most traded reptile species worldwide. In Hong Kong, pet and TCM
markets sell tokay geckos while wild populations also persist. To clarify
connections between trade sources and destinations, we compared genetics
and stable isotopes of wild tokays in local and nonlocal populations to
dried individuals from TCM markets across Hong Kong. We found that TCM
tokays are likely not of local origin. Most wild tokays were related to
individuals in South China, indicating a probable natural origin. However,
two populations contained individuals more similar to distant populations,
indicating pet trade origins. Our results highlight the complexity of
wildlife trade impacts within trade hubs. Such trade dynamics complicate
local legal regulation when endangered species are protected, but the same
species might also be non-native and possibly damaging to the environment. |
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DOI: | 10.5061/dryad.r4xgxd2gc |