Large-Scale Trade in Legally Protected Marine Mollusc Shells from Java and Bali, Indonesia.

BACKGROUND:Tropical marine molluscs are traded globally. Larger species with slow life histories are under threat from over-exploitation. We report on the trade in protected marine mollusc shells in and from Java and Bali, Indonesia. Since 1987 twelve species of marine molluscs are protected under I...

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Main Authors: Vincent Nijman, Denise Spaan, K Anne-Isola Nekaris
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2015-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4696778?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-e5fff5c6040f4104a9124c6e456a24642020-11-25T02:25:03ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032015-01-011012e014059310.1371/journal.pone.0140593Large-Scale Trade in Legally Protected Marine Mollusc Shells from Java and Bali, Indonesia.Vincent NijmanDenise SpaanK Anne-Isola NekarisBACKGROUND:Tropical marine molluscs are traded globally. Larger species with slow life histories are under threat from over-exploitation. We report on the trade in protected marine mollusc shells in and from Java and Bali, Indonesia. Since 1987 twelve species of marine molluscs are protected under Indonesian law to shield them from overexploitation. Despite this protection they are traded openly in large volumes. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS:We collected data on species composition, origins, volumes and prices at two large open markets (2013), collected data from wholesale traders (2013), and compiled seizure data by the Indonesian authorities (2008-2013). All twelve protected species were observed in trade. Smaller species were traded for <USD1.00 whereas prices of larger species were USD15.00-40.00 with clear price-size relationships. Some shells were collected locally in Java and Bali, but the trade involves networks stretching hundreds of kilometres throughout Indonesia. Wholesale traders offer protected marine mollusc shells for the export market by the container or by the metric ton. Data from 20 confiscated shipments show an on-going trade in these molluscs. Over 42,000 shells were seized over a 5-year period, with a retail value of USD700,000 within Indonesia; horned helmet (Cassis cornuta) (>32,000 shells valued at USD500,000), chambered nautilus (Nautilus pompilius) (>3,000 shells, USD60,000) and giant clams (Tridacna spp.) (>2,000 shells, USD45,000) were traded in largest volumes. Two-thirds of this trade was destined for international markets, including in the USA and Asia-Pacific region. CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE:We demonstrated that the trade in protected marine mollusc shells in Indonesia is not controlled nor monitored, that it involves large volumes, and that networks of shell collectors, traders, middlemen and exporters span the globe. This impedes protection of these species on the ground and calls into question the effectiveness of protected species management in Indonesia; solutions are unlikely to be found only in Indonesia and must involve the cooperation of importing countries.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4696778?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Vincent Nijman
Denise Spaan
K Anne-Isola Nekaris
spellingShingle Vincent Nijman
Denise Spaan
K Anne-Isola Nekaris
Large-Scale Trade in Legally Protected Marine Mollusc Shells from Java and Bali, Indonesia.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Vincent Nijman
Denise Spaan
K Anne-Isola Nekaris
author_sort Vincent Nijman
title Large-Scale Trade in Legally Protected Marine Mollusc Shells from Java and Bali, Indonesia.
title_short Large-Scale Trade in Legally Protected Marine Mollusc Shells from Java and Bali, Indonesia.
title_full Large-Scale Trade in Legally Protected Marine Mollusc Shells from Java and Bali, Indonesia.
title_fullStr Large-Scale Trade in Legally Protected Marine Mollusc Shells from Java and Bali, Indonesia.
title_full_unstemmed Large-Scale Trade in Legally Protected Marine Mollusc Shells from Java and Bali, Indonesia.
title_sort large-scale trade in legally protected marine mollusc shells from java and bali, indonesia.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2015-01-01
description BACKGROUND:Tropical marine molluscs are traded globally. Larger species with slow life histories are under threat from over-exploitation. We report on the trade in protected marine mollusc shells in and from Java and Bali, Indonesia. Since 1987 twelve species of marine molluscs are protected under Indonesian law to shield them from overexploitation. Despite this protection they are traded openly in large volumes. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS:We collected data on species composition, origins, volumes and prices at two large open markets (2013), collected data from wholesale traders (2013), and compiled seizure data by the Indonesian authorities (2008-2013). All twelve protected species were observed in trade. Smaller species were traded for <USD1.00 whereas prices of larger species were USD15.00-40.00 with clear price-size relationships. Some shells were collected locally in Java and Bali, but the trade involves networks stretching hundreds of kilometres throughout Indonesia. Wholesale traders offer protected marine mollusc shells for the export market by the container or by the metric ton. Data from 20 confiscated shipments show an on-going trade in these molluscs. Over 42,000 shells were seized over a 5-year period, with a retail value of USD700,000 within Indonesia; horned helmet (Cassis cornuta) (>32,000 shells valued at USD500,000), chambered nautilus (Nautilus pompilius) (>3,000 shells, USD60,000) and giant clams (Tridacna spp.) (>2,000 shells, USD45,000) were traded in largest volumes. Two-thirds of this trade was destined for international markets, including in the USA and Asia-Pacific region. CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE:We demonstrated that the trade in protected marine mollusc shells in Indonesia is not controlled nor monitored, that it involves large volumes, and that networks of shell collectors, traders, middlemen and exporters span the globe. This impedes protection of these species on the ground and calls into question the effectiveness of protected species management in Indonesia; solutions are unlikely to be found only in Indonesia and must involve the cooperation of importing countries.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4696778?pdf=render
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