Asian Wildlife Traders Harness Social Media: Conservationists

Advertisement
By Agence France-Presse | Updated: 3 March 2016 17:38 IST

Social media sites are increasingly being used in Asia as platforms for the illegal trade of threatened species such as orangutan and sun bears, conservation groups said Thursday.

The trend poses a new and worrying threat to wildlife in a tech-savvy region where products derived from a range of species are sought for traditional medicines and exotic animals are prized as pets, said wildlife-trade monitor Traffic and conservation group WWF.

"Traders are clearly moving to non-conventional methods of sale such as utilising online portals and social media in order to evade detection, reach a broader audience and increase transaction efficiency and convenience," Traffic said in a report released to coincide with Thursday's World Wildlife Day.

Advertisement

Growing numbers of traders are using Instagram, closed groups on Facebook and password-protected online forums to reach Asian customers, it added.

Advertisement

Traffic said in a single month in China last year, thousands of ivory products, 77 whole rhino horns and large numbers of endangered birds were found advertised for sale on sites such as QQ and WeChat, which are popular in China.

"The wildlife trade network is getting smarter and more sophisticated," WWF Malaysia director Dionysius Sharma told AFP.

Advertisement

"We need to be one step ahead and come up with creative solutions to eradicate this problem."

Traffic's report focused heavily on Malaysia, where Facebook use is high.

Advertisement

Over a 50-hour period last year, it monitored 14 Facebook wildlife-trading groups catering to customers in Malaysia, counting more than 67,500 active members of the groups.

During the observation period, scores of traders put up more than 200 individual posts offering to sell live wild animals ranging from rare birds to orangutans and sun bears, it said.

Brazen traders
Often, photos of for-sale animals were uploaded to Facebook, Instagram, and other sites, while bargaining took place over platforms like WhatsApp in Malaysia and BlackBerry Messenger in Indonesia.

"Trading appears to be very relaxed and traders will happily provide their contact details and will sometimes offer to deliver the animal to the buyer's home address," said the report.

Facebook groups can quickly change their names or shut down and pop up in another guise, highlighting the challenges facing law enforcement.

A trade in exotic pets also was growing, said Elizabeth John, a Traffic spokeswoman.

"Having a dog or cat isn't enough for people anymore. They want unusual and exotic pets now," she said, adding that the slow loris, an endangered Southeast Asian primate, was among hot favourites in Malaysia.

Traffic said it was working with enforcement agencies in many countries on the issue and also was in contact with Facebook.

It called for "closer collaboration between law enforcement agencies and Facebook".

Facebook declined comment to AFP.

But Traffic's report quoted a Facebook spokesperson saying the social media giant does not allow such activities on its site and was "committed to working with Traffic to help tackle" the problem.

A spokesman for Malaysia's Department of Wildlife and National Parks said it was aware of the issue and had taken measures that had resulted in arrests, but gave no specifics.

Traffic said that in one case last year, a wildlife smuggler was arrested in Indonesia after trying to sell a young Sumatran orangutan, one of the world's most endangered primates, using Facebook and BlackBerry Messenger.

He had also sold other rare species such as slow lorises and hornbills.

 

For the latest tech news and reviews, follow Gadgets 360 on X, Facebook, WhatsApp, Threads and Google News. For the latest videos on gadgets and tech, subscribe to our YouTube channel. If you want to know everything about top influencers, follow our in-house Who'sThat360 on Instagram and YouTube.

Further reading: Facebook, Social, Twitter, WeChat, Wildlife
Advertisement

Related Stories

Popular Mobile Brands
  1. Apple Event 2025: Everything You Need to Know Ahead of iPhone 17 Launch
  2. Apple MacBook Air M4 Available With Up to Rs. 16,000 Discount via Amazon
  3. Motorola Edge 60 Pro Review: Quite the Performer
  4. Apple iPhone 17 'Awe Dropping' Event Today: How to Watch Livestream
  5. Apple Event 2025 LIVE: iPhone 17 Series, AirPods Pro 3 and More Expected
  6. Flipkart Big Billion Days Sale: Google Pixel 9 to Get This Huge Price Cut
  7. Param Sundari OTT Release Date Anticipated: All You Need to Know
  8. iQOO 15, iQOO Neo 11 Series Details Tipped; Might Feature 7,000mAh Battery
  9. OnePlus 15 Camera Details Leaked Again, Could Feature This Telephoto Camera
  10. Vivo X300 Pro Display Size Revealed; Design Partially Teased
  1. JioSaavn Pro Plan Price in India Temporarily Slashed to Rs. 9 for First Two Months
  2. Bybit Resumes Full Operations in India After Regulatory Approval
  3. Keanu Reeves Says He'd Love to Return as Johnny Silverhand in Cyberpunk 2
  4. iQOO 15, iQOO Neo 11 Series Specifications Leaked; Said to Get 7,000mAh Battery, 100W Charging Support
  5. NPCI to Increase UPI Per Day, Per Transaction Transfer Limits From September 15
  6. Apple Event 2025: iPhone 17 Launch Date and Time, Live Updates and Everything You Need to Know
  7. Xiaomi Confirms Authorised Retailers Ahead of Amazon Great Indian Festival and Flipkart Big Billion Days Sale
  8. Google Backtracks on Previous Traffic Claims, Says “Open Web Is Already in Rapid Decline”
  9. Google Reportedly Pulls Daily Hub Feature on Pixel 10 Series to ‘Improve Experience’
  10. Google Updates Gemini App With Audio File Uploading Capability, Announced Rate Limits
Gadgets 360 is available in
Download Our Apps
Available in Hindi
© Copyright Red Pixels Ventures Limited 2025. All rights reserved.