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Genomic analyses reveal poaching hotspots and illegal trade in pangolins from Africa to Asia.

Jen C TinsmanCristian GruppiChristen M BossuTracey-Leigh PriggeRyan J HarriganVirginia ZaunbrecherKlaus-Peter KoepfliMatthew LeBretonKevin Y NjaboCheng WendaShuang XingKatharine A AbernethyGary AdesExcellence AkeredoluImuzei B AndrewTaneisha Aneika BarrettIva BernáthováBarbora Černá BolfíkováJoseph L DiffoGhislain F DifouoLionel Esong EbongIchu GodwillAurélie Flore Koumba PamboKim LabuschagneJulius Nwobegahay MbekemBrice R MombouaCarla L Mousset MoumbolouStéphan NtieElizabeth Rose-JeffreysFranklin T SimoKeerthana SundarMarkéta SwiackáJean Michel TakuoValery N K TallaUbald TamoufeCaroline DingleKristen C RueggTimothy Carlton BonebrakeThomas B Smith
Published in: Science (New York, N.Y.) (2023)
The white-bellied pangolin ( Phataginus tricuspis ) is the world's most trafficked mammal and is at risk of extinction. Reducing the illegal wildlife trade requires an understanding of its origins. Using a genomic approach for tracing confiscations and analyzing 111 samples collected from known geographic localities in Africa and 643 seized scales from Asia between 2012 and 2018, we found that poaching pressures shifted over time from West to Central Africa. Recently, Cameroon's southern border has emerged as a site of intense poaching. Using data from seizures representing nearly 1 million African pangolins, we identified Nigeria as one important hub for trafficking, where scales are amassed and transshipped to markets in Asia. This origin-to-destination approach offers new opportunities to disrupt the illegal wildlife trade and to guide anti-trafficking measures.
Keyphrases
  • copy number
  • electronic health record
  • big data
  • gene expression
  • network analysis
  • machine learning
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