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Amateur venom-extraction business may hasten extinction of scorpions

Sääksjärvi Ilari; Zamani Alireza; Prendini Lorenzo

Amateur venom-extraction business may hasten extinction of scorpions

Sääksjärvi Ilari
Zamani Alireza
Prendini Lorenzo
Katso/Avaa
Publisher's PDF (3.081Mb)
Lataukset: 

Arachnologische Gesellschaft eV
doi:10.30963/aramit6103
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Julkaisun pysyvä osoite on:
https://urn.fi/URN:NBN:fi-fe2021042714021
Tiivistelmä

The pharmacological utility of various biochemical compounds in scorpion venom offers promise in several research fields but its potential economic value has placed pressure on scorpion populations already threatened by habitat destruction and over harvesting for the international trade in exotic pets. Since at least 2016, several countries in Africa and Asia reported an increase in the number of people investing in farms for maintaining scorpions and extracting (‘milking’) their venom for commercial use. In addition to serious doubts about the quality of the venom extracted at these farms, repeated collecting of wild specimens may denude an area of scorpions.Given estimates of a million species threatened with extinction over the next decade, unsustainable overexploitation remains a major driver of biodiversity loss. The amateur venom-extraction business has the potential to adversely affect scorpion biodiversity in several biologically rich but poorly documented countries, which calls for urgent action from governments, universities and scientific societies to enhance the conservation of local scorpions. The following activities should thus be initiated or expanded: faunistic surveys and developing national lists of endemic species, red-listing threatened and endangered species using the IUCN Red List categories and criteria,educating local communities, and ceasing to issue permits for the collection of scorpions for commercial exploitation of any kind.

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