Mortality and morbidity in wild Taiwanese pangolin (Manis pentadactyla pentadactyla)

Globally, pangolins are threatened by poaching and illegal trade. Taiwan presents a contrary situation, where the wild pangolin population has stabilized and even begun to increase in the last two decades. This paper illustrates the factors responsible for causing mortality and morbidity in the wild...

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Veröffentlicht in:PloS one 2019-02, Vol.14 (2), p.e0198230
Hauptverfasser: Sun, Nick Ching-Min, Arora, Bharti, Lin, Jing-Shiun, Lin, Wen-Chi, Chi, Meng-Jou, Chen, Chen-Chih, Pei, Kurtis Jai-Chyi
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Arora, Bharti
Lin, Jing-Shiun
Lin, Wen-Chi
Chi, Meng-Jou
Chen, Chen-Chih
Pei, Kurtis Jai-Chyi
description Globally, pangolins are threatened by poaching and illegal trade. Taiwan presents a contrary situation, where the wild pangolin population has stabilized and even begun to increase in the last two decades. This paper illustrates the factors responsible for causing mortality and morbidity in the wild Taiwanese pangolin (Manis pentadactyla pentadactyla) based on radio-tracking data of wild pangolins and records of sick or injured pangolins admitted to a Taiwanese wildlife rehabilitation center. Despite being proficient burrowers, results from radio-tracking show that Taiwanese pangolins are highly susceptible to getting trapped in tree hollows or ground burrows. Data from Pingtung Rescue Center for Endangered Wild Animals showed that trauma (73.0%) was the major reason for morbidity in the Taiwanese pangolin with trauma from gin traps being the leading cause (77.8%), especially during the dry season, followed by tail injuries caused by dog attacks (20.4%). Despite these threats, Taiwan has had substantial success in rehabilitating and releasing injured pangolins, primarily due to the close collaboration of Taiwanese wildlife rehabilitation centers over the last twenty years.
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Taiwan presents a contrary situation, where the wild pangolin population has stabilized and even begun to increase in the last two decades. This paper illustrates the factors responsible for causing mortality and morbidity in the wild Taiwanese pangolin (Manis pentadactyla pentadactyla) based on radio-tracking data of wild pangolins and records of sick or injured pangolins admitted to a Taiwanese wildlife rehabilitation center. Despite being proficient burrowers, results from radio-tracking show that Taiwanese pangolins are highly susceptible to getting trapped in tree hollows or ground burrows. Data from Pingtung Rescue Center for Endangered Wild Animals showed that trauma (73.0%) was the major reason for morbidity in the Taiwanese pangolin with trauma from gin traps being the leading cause (77.8%), especially during the dry season, followed by tail injuries caused by dog attacks (20.4%). 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subjects Analysis
Animal rehabilitation
Animal welfare
Animals
Animals, Wild
Arachnids
Bans
Biology and Life Sciences
Burrows
Carnivora
Conservation of Natural Resources - methods
Dry season
Endangered & extinct species
Endangered animals
Engineering and Technology
Environmental protection
Injuries
Laboratory animals
Mammals
Manis pentadactyla pentadactyla
Medicine and Health Sciences
Morbidity
Mortality
People and Places
Poaching
Rehabilitation
Roads & highways
Taiwan
Tracking
Trauma
Veterinary colleges
Veterinary medicine
Wild animals
Wildlife
Wildlife conservation
Wildlife radiolocation
Xenarthra - metabolism
title Mortality and morbidity in wild Taiwanese pangolin (Manis pentadactyla pentadactyla)
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