Pangolins: Scales of Injustice
‘The most trafficked wild mammal in the world’ – so scream the headlines. The burgeoning international trade in these mammals means all eight of the world’s pangolin species (four African and four Asian species) are under threat of extinction.

However, the global Covid-19 pandemic has now shone a new light on the trade: pangolins have been named as possible vectors for the coronavirus to travel from their bat hosts into humans. In southeast Asian ‘wet markets’ multiple wild animals are indiscriminately stacked in small cages, one on top of the other, their bodily fluids mingling unchecked, thus providing just the required pathways for transmission of disease.

In Pangolins: Scales of Injustice, Richard Peirce introduces readers to this enigmatic and discreetly charming mammal. He pieces together the likely history of a pangolin poached in Zimbabwe and brought to Johannesburg to be traded. Readers accompany an agent of the African Pangolin Working Group on a real-life sting operation to rescue the animal and capture the traffickers, and follow the subsequent rehabilitation and release of the animal into the wild.

Peirce unpacks the methods and terrifying statistics of the trade, describes visiting markets and restaurants in southeast Asia, explains the links between wildlife and Covid-19, and details China’s response to the unfolding drama of the pandemic.
1137192857
Pangolins: Scales of Injustice
‘The most trafficked wild mammal in the world’ – so scream the headlines. The burgeoning international trade in these mammals means all eight of the world’s pangolin species (four African and four Asian species) are under threat of extinction.

However, the global Covid-19 pandemic has now shone a new light on the trade: pangolins have been named as possible vectors for the coronavirus to travel from their bat hosts into humans. In southeast Asian ‘wet markets’ multiple wild animals are indiscriminately stacked in small cages, one on top of the other, their bodily fluids mingling unchecked, thus providing just the required pathways for transmission of disease.

In Pangolins: Scales of Injustice, Richard Peirce introduces readers to this enigmatic and discreetly charming mammal. He pieces together the likely history of a pangolin poached in Zimbabwe and brought to Johannesburg to be traded. Readers accompany an agent of the African Pangolin Working Group on a real-life sting operation to rescue the animal and capture the traffickers, and follow the subsequent rehabilitation and release of the animal into the wild.

Peirce unpacks the methods and terrifying statistics of the trade, describes visiting markets and restaurants in southeast Asia, explains the links between wildlife and Covid-19, and details China’s response to the unfolding drama of the pandemic.
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Pangolins: Scales of Injustice

Pangolins: Scales of Injustice

by Richard Peirce
Pangolins: Scales of Injustice

Pangolins: Scales of Injustice

by Richard Peirce

Paperback

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Overview

‘The most trafficked wild mammal in the world’ – so scream the headlines. The burgeoning international trade in these mammals means all eight of the world’s pangolin species (four African and four Asian species) are under threat of extinction.

However, the global Covid-19 pandemic has now shone a new light on the trade: pangolins have been named as possible vectors for the coronavirus to travel from their bat hosts into humans. In southeast Asian ‘wet markets’ multiple wild animals are indiscriminately stacked in small cages, one on top of the other, their bodily fluids mingling unchecked, thus providing just the required pathways for transmission of disease.

In Pangolins: Scales of Injustice, Richard Peirce introduces readers to this enigmatic and discreetly charming mammal. He pieces together the likely history of a pangolin poached in Zimbabwe and brought to Johannesburg to be traded. Readers accompany an agent of the African Pangolin Working Group on a real-life sting operation to rescue the animal and capture the traffickers, and follow the subsequent rehabilitation and release of the animal into the wild.

Peirce unpacks the methods and terrifying statistics of the trade, describes visiting markets and restaurants in southeast Asia, explains the links between wildlife and Covid-19, and details China’s response to the unfolding drama of the pandemic.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781775847120
Publisher: Penguin Random House South Africa
Publication date: 06/04/2021
Pages: 160
Product dimensions: 5.92(w) x 8.40(h) x (d)

About the Author

Richard Peirce is best known as a shark conservationist – his main focus for over 20 years. Chairman of the Shark Conservation Society and the Shark Trust, he has authored several books on the topic. Richard and his wife Jacqui are confirmed nomads who spend half the year inSouth Africa; their love of wildlife takes them to the bush at every opportunity.

Table of Contents

Author's note 7

Foreword - Prof. Ray Jansen 8

Foreword - Izak Kruiper 12

Acknowledgements 14

Acronyms 15

Preface 16

Pangolin facts 18

Part 1 Zambezi 22

Chapter 1 An unlikely hero 25

Chapter 2 Matabeleland 31

Chapter 3 For the love of animals 37

Chapter 4 Temminck's pangolin 45

Chapter 5 Capture, tip-off, sting 51

Chapter 6 Rehabilitation, rest and recovery 67

Chapter 7 Freedom in a new home 77

Part 2 Tswalu 86

Chapter 8 A new beginning 89

Chapter 9 Pangolin tales 101

Part 3 China & Southeast Asia 108

Chapter 10 Ineffective and ignored 111

Chapter 11 China's virus? 125

Part 4 Scales of Injustice 136

Chapter 12 Biology, history and symbolism 139

Chapter 13 'Most trafficked mammal in the world' 145

Chapter 14 The future 151

Epilogue 156

Stop press 158

Useful websites 160

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