Wildlife Trafficking
A reporter follows the lucrative, illicit and heartrending trade in stolen wild animals deep into Ecuador's rain forest
- Smithsonian magazine, December 2009, Subscribe
(Page 4 of 6)
Many experts say wild parrots can no longer sustain such losses. Of the 145 parrot species in the Americas, 46 are at risk of extinction. And the rarer the species, the more valuable it is to poachers—which only puts more pressure on the few remaining specimens. A single Lear's macaw, one of the coveted "blue macaws" from Brazil, can ultimately sell for $10,000 or more. The trade can send even apparently healthy species over the edge. Charles Munn, a parrot researcher at Tropical Nature, a Philadelphia-based conservation group that advocates ecotourism, told me, "If you shoot macaws for meat or feathers, or if you take the babies from the nest, you can wipe them out quickly. Poaching can get out of control quickly."
Several weeks after our first visit, we headed back to the scarlet macaw nest in a large canoe powered by a 25-horse-power motor. I had been thinking a lot about the macaws, wondering if I could persuade Paa not to cut down the tree.
It was just a couple of days before a feria, or market day, at a small town upstream from the nest. Canoes loaded with people and merchandise passed us; the passengers had been traveling for days, camping on sandbars. After reaching a dirt road built by the oil companies, they would hitchhike or walk another 15 miles to the village. Many canoes held animals. We stopped to visit with one boatload of 14 people, from elders to small babies. The driver offered to sell me an armadillo. It could be a pet or a meal, he said. He pulled a struggling baby armadillo, still pink, from a bag. He would let me have it for $20.
In the middle of the canoe were boxes of smoked meat. The charred hand of a monkey stuck out of one, fingers clenched. Indigenous people may legally hunt for subsistence purposes, but carne del monte, or wild meat, is illegal to sell without approval from the Ministry of Environment. Still, the meat is popular. At a market in the Ecuadoran Amazon Basin I saw for sale the meat of turtles, agoutis (a large rodent), armadillos and monkeys—all illegal. Other people on their way upriver to the feria carried peccaries (related to pigs), blue-headed parrots and parakeets. Selling them is just about the only way they had of making a few dollars.
The canoes carrying meat and animals for sale increased my worries about the scarlet macaws. Still, I had reason to hope the nest was intact. Paa said he had not heard anything about them. And two weeks earlier, I had heard through friends that Fausto had seen the birds at the nest on one of his trips downriver. Fausto was not with us this time. This canoe belonged to two young Huaorani brothers with English names, Nelson and Joel.
When we rounded the bend near the nest, the two macaws were sitting together on a branch. Their backs to us, they gleamed red in the morning sun. Their long tails waved and shimmered in the soft breeze. When they saw us, the birds screamed, lifted from their branch and disappeared into the dark forest. I was relieved to see them.
Then we saw the fresh footprints on the shore. We raced to the nest. The tree lay on the ground, smashed and wet. There were no chicks. All that remained were a few wet and mangled feathers near the nest hole.
We stood around the tree, speechless, as if by a coffin. Paa said he had not taken the chicks—someone else had. He shrugged. I was coming to realize, regardless of the laws in big cities, that capturing animals in the jungle is common. It's not the shadowy activity people might think; it's more like an open secret. The downed tree, to me, represented all the waste and destruction of this illicit trade, which destroys not only wild parrots but also the trees that serve as nest sites year after year. Thus trafficking harms future generations, too.
We did not know whether the babies survived the crash of the tree onto the ground. (A recent study in Peru found that 48 percent of all blue-and-yellow macaws die when their trees are felled.) Even after the nest had been robbed, the parent macaws had stayed by the downed tree, the image of fidelity and loss.
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Comments (12)
animal trafficking is WRONG. FREE THE BIRDS
Posted by Justin Bieber on December 5,2012 | 11:01 AM
this story is funny
Posted by hi hello on December 5,2012 | 11:00 AM
I love birds especially the red tailed parrot so I really hope that animal trafficking stops soon
Posted by danny on November 22,2012 | 07:25 PM
animals should be gratful for the people thet care for them.ity wonderful to know theat there are people out there that injoy helping animals and risk taking their life to help an animal they have no clue about.
Posted by cheyenne vaughn on September 8,2011 | 11:31 AM
We breed scarlet macaws ourselves, they are great parents. I certainly would not cut down a tree and risk a baby bird's life for $150, no matter how poor I was.
These people are uncaring, ridiculous barbarians, and by the sounds of it, bad liars too!
Pretty soon the only macaws left will be with people like us and there won't be any rainforest left anyway.
Posted by Susan Newman on August 20,2010 | 09:08 PM
Thanks Smithsonian, Thanks Dr. Charles Bergman for that magnificent article that shows the bottom of the problem.
What we can do to help to end this horrible practice?
Posted by Jose A. Zambrano on April 22,2010 | 01:16 AM
Is this problem right under our noses as tourists? Is there a way we can affect this horrible sitation at that level...If I am staying in a hotel with exotic birds or other animals, kept in cages for display - what can I do to find out how they come to have them? where can I - regular tourist person have an affect directly on this problem? It's very frustrating not to be able to do anything to help this horrible situation, w
Posted by Sus on January 1,2010 | 12:52 PM
Terrific article and pictures but the macaw on p. 36 is misidentified. It is a green-winged macaw, not a scarlet macaw. The scarlet has no feathering on it's eye-patches. The green-winged has red feathering on it's eye-patches. I'm not sure about the macaw on the cover because the photo isn't as clear, but I suspect it is also a green-winged macaw.
Posted by Timothy Spears on December 14,2009 | 02:12 AM
I commend the writer for bringing this travesty to light-again. As a bird watcher and animal lover i hope we can do something to stop the killing.
Posted by kathy wood on December 7,2009 | 08:18 PM
Stories like this break my heart, it's unbelievable how cruel humans can be. I realize these people need to earn a living but they can be retrained to run small eco-lodges, restaurants, guided nature walks, make and sell handicrafts (no bird feathers please). We do at least one eco-tour a year and give as much of our business as possible to local enterprises so they get the idea that wild birds bring in more money when they are allowed to stay wild.
It's because of poachers that Spix's Macaws almost became extinct, actually they are extinct in the wild but thankfully there are about 100 in breeding programs to rescue the species before they are lost forever.
If you are planning a trip, please consider an eco-tour to appreciate wild birds in their natural habitats.
Tara Tuatai
FeatheredandFree.com
Posted by Tara Tuatai on November 27,2009 | 06:12 PM
this is not very interesting
Posted by cy on November 23,2009 | 01:54 PM
Hopefully the poaching can be curbed before many of the parrots are extinct. With the younger generation, like Nelson, poaching could be slowed if they find ways to monitor it.
With oil companies, and possible urbanized areas for tourism with hotels and resorts in and around these jungles, all these industrialized areas could cause more harm in a very short period of time to the parrot population vs. what the poachers themselves could cause on the macaws and other rare species of parrots over a span of many decades.
Time will tell.
Doc Westfield,
PetOutletMall.com
Posted by Doc Westfield @ PetOutletMall.com on November 22,2009 | 11:42 AM