From Editors, Earth Island Journal <[email protected]>
Subject An Old Threat Resurfaces
Date September 29, 2023 11:45 PM
  Links have been removed from this email. Learn more in the FAQ.
  Links have been removed from this email. Learn more in the FAQ.
Jaguar poaching is on the rise again and Suriname has become an unexpected hub.

News of the world environment

&nbsp;NEWSLETTER | SEPTEMBER 29, 2023

An Old Threat Resurfaces

THE JAGUAR’S CORPSE was ceremoniously extended on the ground. Its eyes were closed, and a swarm of flies hovered over its half-opened jaws. “This is the dangerous species that lives in the woods,” intones the man filming the dead animal with his cellphone in Sranan Tongo, the vernacular language of Suriname. “Today is the day you were shot.” He steps away from the lean corpse of the feline, beautiful even in death, before continuing: “We had seen [you] a couple of times before. You were doing a show, and today we shot you. We are going to cook you and eat you.”

In September of 2022, the video of the dead jaguar started circulating in Surinamese social media. One of the first people to receive it was Els van Lavieren, a Marine &amp; Wildlife Conservation Program manager at Conservation International Suriname and a consultant for the big cat conservation group Panthera. Van Lavieren, an affable Dutch primatologist with a leonine mane, had been analyzing the dynamics of wildlife trafficking in the small South American nation for almost half a decade. During that time, she had compiled a database of events related to the illegal trade of felines. There were 70 records involving jaguars: fangs sold at massage centers and Chinese stores, pelts seized near illegal gold mines or at small roadside stands, jaguar skulls in jewelry stores, week-old cubs in private residences, and carcasses paraded in logging camps, farms, and, as in this footage, on social media.

This particular video confounded her. Outside of some small factions in Suriname’s Chinese community, who might partake of jaguar parts for their supposed medicinal purposes, she had never heard of people eating jaguars…

Early last year, I traveled to Suriname to investigate the trafficking of jaguar parts from America to Asia, where people reportedly use the fangs, bones, and claws as ingredients in traditional Chinese medicine, or as luxury status symbols in a subculture known as Wenwan...

The illegal trade of jaguar parts is a relatively old story... But unlike the wider trafficking of jaguar parts, reports from Suriname about the production of jaguar paste — a replacement for tiger glue, popular in Vietnam and Thailand for supposed health benefits — was new. This made the country a great candidate for understanding the evolution of the trade.

Journalist Santiago Willis’s feature in our Autumn 2023 print issue delves into jaguar-poaching in Suriname, one of South America's most obscure countries, as rising demand for this big cat’s body parts threatens to undo decades of conservation work.

READ MORE

Photo by Tambako The Jaguar

SUGGESTED BROWSING

Finding a Home

Creating the perfect shelter for a lizard or owl displaced by, say, rising temperatures or urban development, is no easy task. Which is why some scientists are turning to new technologies like virtual simulations, microchip-automated doors, and 3D printing for help. (Undark)

The Forest Wants Everyone

“We have been told a terrible, violent lie that disability is incompatible with nature, that accessibility is antithetical to preservation. This view has severed many disabled people’s relationship to wilderness.” (Orion)

No Escape

When wildfires burn across eastern Washington, many prisoners are confined to their hazy cells with no way to avoid the smoke. So far, the state has declined to fund solutions. (Washington State Standard)

A Tragedy Foretold

Though the world wouldn't catch on until disaster struck, a tight-knit community of seafarers, explorers, and bold submariners worried for years that Stockton Rush's OceanGate implosion was all but guaranteed. (Vanity Fair)

Not a subscriber yet?

You can get 4 issues of our award-winning print magazine delivered for $20 ($25 for international addresses) by clicking this secure link.

YOU MAKE OUR WORK POSSIBLE

Earth Island Journal is a nonprofit publication. Our mission is to inform and inspire action. Which is why we rely on readers like you for support. If you believe in the work we do, please consider making a tax-deductible donation to our Green Journalism Fund.

DONATE TODAY!

Did a thoughtful friend forward you our newsletter? Keep up with the latest from Earth Island Journal!

SIGN UP TODAY

Follow

Follow

Subscribe

You are receiving this email newsletter because you signed up on our website.
If this newsletter was forwarded to you, you can sign up to the email newsletter here.

Support our work by subscribing to our quarterly print magazine.

Copyright © 2023 Earth Island Journal, All rights reserved.

Our mailing address is:

Earth Island Journal
2150 Allston Way Ste 460
Berkeley, CA 94704-1375

Add us to your address book

Want to change how you receive these emails?
Update your preferences
Screenshot of the email generated on import

Message Analysis