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Radiocarbon dating of seized ivory confirms rapid decline in African elephant populations and provides insight into illegal trade.

Thure E CerlingJanet E BarnetteLesley A ChessonIain Douglas-HamiltonKathleen S GobushKevin T UnoSamuel K WasserXiaomei Xu
Published in: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America (2016)
Carbon-14 measurements on 231 elephant ivory specimens from 14 large ivory seizures (≥0.5 ton) made between 2002 and 2014 show that most ivory (ca 90%) was derived from animals that had died less than 3 y before ivory was confiscated. This indicates that the assumption of recent elephant death for mortality estimates of African elephants is correct: Very little "old" ivory is included in large ivory shipments from Africa. We found only one specimen of the 231 analyzed to have a lag time longer than 6 y. Patterns of trade differ by regions: East African ivory, based on genetic assignments of geographic origin, has a much higher fraction of "rapid" transit than ivory originating in the Tridom region of Cameroon-Gabon-Congo. Carbon-14 is an important tool in understanding patterns of movement of illegal wildlife products.
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