Dear Wayne,
My two cents on this: The idea is bad as is any similar incentive to have a government agency micromanage human activity.

The reason why the problem with illegal wildlife trafficing became as serious as it has ever been is that this 'business' is PROFITABLE. It is profitable for the local poachers who are often compelled to harvest and resell wildlife as a way to feed their families. It is profitable for smugglers who constantly polish their tactics in evading border control. It is profitable for illegal dealers who know how to find loopholes or have the approptiate 'contacts' among the authorities. Finally, the persistentce of this problem and and its growing trend work as positive reinforcement for regulatory agencies - either as an argument to demand more funding from the government (in the best case scenario) or as a way to stimulate corruption (in the worst). By imposing restrictions on wildlife trade far beyond their own enforcement capacity, government agencies effectively set the stage for such positive feedback systems. Imposing more severe restrictions and/or punishment only rases the stakes in this 'cat-and-mouse' game with no positive effect. Every time a new regulatory incentive is put forward, those who profit from illegal trade will remain one notch ahead of the enforcement mechanisms. At the same time, people and organizations conducting legal wildlife transactions, harvesting, or research (e.g., zoos, museums, and captive breeding programs) get hit with yet another set of compliance requirements that they need to meet in order to continue their work. All that eventually happens is yet more public funding (including research grants) gets converted into yet more bureaucracy. As a by-product, it can sometines discourage or even force to shut down research projects in biology if the associated bureaucratic burden becomes unbearable.

Personally, I do not see how the problem with illegal wildlife trade is conceptually different from illegal drug trafficking. Perhaps the key difference I can think of is that the latter was recently recognized by the UN as unsolvable using the current regulatory and policing strategies employed throughout the past decades. The global community has yet to accept a similar failure in its attempt to curb illegal wildlife trade through government and international regulation. This is particularly sad, given that the bulk of the biodiversity lost today is due to habitat loss anyway. When species rich ecosystems are converted into biofuels and replaced with farmland or shopping malls, it is done for very similar profit reasons as wildlife trade. However, such activities are regulated at a different scale; they do not fall under the competence of the CBD or CITES, nor do captive or harvesting permits, microchips or anything of that sort apply to them.

As a law-obiding taxpayer, I am not thrilled with the idea of an Orwellian future where wildlife enforcement squads will be raiding citizens' households and checking for microchips in every hamster while the destruction of millions of hectares of natural habitat goes on unchecked. I would much rather see my tax money diverted towards more international and govermnent efforts that will focus on empowering local communities to develop sustainable conservation initiatives and will make it profitable (and legally possible!) for 'people of the land' to maintain and protect their biodiversity and natural resources instead of depleting them. At the regulatory level, I would prefer to see a licencing, rather than a permitting, system be instituted for registered breeders, researchers, and other people/institutions professionally working with wildlife and not involved in large scale commercial harvesting and habitat alteration. A similar system seems to work well for hunters and drivers and I doubt that it will fail in regulating a much smaller number of professionals. It will likely enable to lower the proportion of regulators to the people they control, potentially releasing tax money for something more constructive.

Lastly, I can understand the implicit interest of government reguatory agencies in complicating the permitting procedures, thus urging their governmets to increase funding, staffing and infrastructure needed to accommodate an ever growing amount of regulatory needs. What I don't understand is why the scientific community at large remains passively supportive of such initiatives, despite the fact that researchers and the legitimate organizations they represent are the first - and sometines the only ones - to be impacted by such 'innovations' in a negative way. Apologies for the long rant...

PS Just to clarify: I am not a conspirologist and not an anarchist, but I do think that the trajectory where many societies are headed with government regulatory micromanagement goes way beyond common sense...

Alex



On 04/07/2011 2:45 AM, Martin Meiss wrote:
I don't think chip implantation is practical for little animals like poison
dart frogs and many aquarium fish.  Also, I'm not sure implantation would
work well in arthropods (many hobbyists keep tarantulas and scorpions).

Martin M. Meiss

2011/7/3 Wayne Tyson<[email protected]>

All:

This is not my area, so it may already be being done, for all I know. And,
it might not be a good idea. I'm just going to suggest it and let my betters
either run with it or post reasons why it's a bad idea.

I suspect that federal legislation might be necessary, but a signing letter
might do the job, or even an administrative ruling by individual agencies,
such as the Fish&  Wildlife Service and other agencies over which FWS has no
jurisdiction (if any).

The idea is to require that all captive animals be microchipped by the
governing agency, with an encrypted code as well as readable information and
tracking devices where feasible, employing the latter by priority where
escape is possible. Possession of "unchipped" animals, after a reasonable
grace period would be a violation in itself.

The idea is to curb illegal capture and importation, as well as track and
identify lost or escaped animals. At the time of implantation, correlative
identifying information should be taken to prevent moving the chip from one
(perhaps dead or more valuable) animal to another.

WT


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