Lickable toads and magic mushrooms: Wildlife traded on the dark web is the kind that gets you high – Down To Earth Magazine

Across 51 dark web marketplaces, the authors found 153 wildlife species were being sold

The internet has made it easier for people to buy and sell a huge variety of wildlife — from orchids, cacti and fungi to thousands of birds, mammals, reptiles, amphibians and fish, as well as insects, corals and other invertebrates.
But alongside legal trade in wildlife, there’s a dark twin — illegal trading of wildlife. Endangered birds with very few left in the wild. Horns sawn off shot rhinos.
The illegal wildlife trade is a blight. It puts yet more pressure on nature, adds to biodiversity loss and threatens biosecurity, sustainable development and human wellbeing globally.
In our new research, we probed the dark web — the secretive section of the internet deliberately set up out of view of search engines. Most people associate the dark web with illicit drug marketplaces. We wanted to see what types of wildlife were being sold there.
The result? Across 51 dark web marketplaces, we found 153 species being sold. These were almost entirely plants and fungi with psychoactive effects, indicating they are part of the well-known dark web drug trade.
There were only a small number of advertisements offering vertebrates such as the infamous Colorado River toad, which faces poaching pressure because its skin secretes psychoactive toxins as a defence.
Why aren’t traders in illegal wildlife using the dark web? Mainly because the trade in illegally traded animals and animal parts is not hidden — it’s all over the open internet. For instance, the frog toxin kambo used in the ritual that killed a Mullumbimby woman in 2019 is still sold openly.
We found over 3,000 advertisements selling wildlife species on dark web marketplaces between 2014 and 2020. We searched these marketplaces for keywords relating to wildlife trade and species names.
What was for sale? Of the 153 species we found, we verified 68 as containing psychoactive chemicals.
The most commonly traded species was a South American tree Mimosa tenuiflora, commonly known as jurema preta, whose bark contains an extremely potent hallucinogen, DMT. Plants made up most of the species being sold, with many coming from Central and Southern America.
We also found 19 species of Psilocybe fungi being sold.
Many species were being sold for their purported medical properties, as well a small number of species being sold for clothing, decoration or as pets.
Many of the animals we found on the dark web have a long history of being illegally traded, such as live African grey parrots, as well as elephant ivory, rhino horn and the teeth and skins of tigers and lions.
We also found small amounts of less commonly documented wildlife, including the Goliath beetle, Chinese golden scorpion and Japanese sea cucumber.
Globally, the wildlife trade is regulated by the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora (CITES). But the regulated market is just a fraction of the whole. To date, CITES protects less than 5 per cent of traded species.
The number of species traded live outnumbers the regulated trade by at least three times, according to some estimates.
To date, there have been few effective disincentives to stop traffickers from selling illegal wildlife online. Punishments for convicted wildlife traffickers are not effective, with Australian traffickers continuing to harvest animals even after being caught.
Efforts to combat wildlife trafficking online are increasing. One positive recent initiative is the End Wildlife Trafficking Online coalition. It’s a collaboration between animal NGOs and online platforms like Facebook, Alibaba and eBay aimed at rooting out online trafficking.
While clamping down on illicit open web trade is crucial, crackdowns here make it more likely that a wider range of wildlife will surface on the dark web.
Australia and all other nations that have signed up to CITES have a responsibility to keep track of internet-based wildlife trade. At recent CITES conferences resolutions were made to track and report all internet trade — including on the dark web — in an effort to boost monitoring and enforcement of wildlife trafficked online.
One stumbling block is the legality of online trade, which depends on factors such as the laws of the country or countries involved and whether the sale actually took place.
To stop the trafficking of iconic Australian species such as shingleback lizards and red-tailed black cockatoos, authorities here have to monitor what native species are being bought and sold online, as well as the species trafficked into and through Australia.
Since 2019 we have been monitoring the wildlife trade in Australia, drawing data from over 80 websites and forums.
Datasets like this will be vital in monitoring and combating internet-facilitated wildlife crime as it continues to grow — especially if enforcement drives traffickers to harder-to-access parts of the internet like the dark web. The Conversation
Phill Cassey, Head, Department of Ecology & Evolutionary Biology, University of Adelaide; Adam Toomes, PhD student at the Invasion Science & Wildlife Ecology Group, University of Adelaide; Charlotte Lassaline, PhD Student, University of Adelaide; Freyja Watters, PhD candidate, University of Adelaide; Jacob Maher, PhD Candidate, University of Adelaide and Oliver C Stringham, Researcher, University of Adelaide
This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.
We are a voice to you; you have been a support to us. Together we build journalism that is independent, credible and fearless. You can further help us by making a donation. This will mean a lot for our ability to bring you news, perspectives and analysis from the ground so that we can make change together.
Comments are moderated and will be published only after the site moderator’s approval. Please use a genuine email ID and provide your name. Selected comments may also be used in the ‘Letters’ section of the Down To Earth print edition.
Down To Earth is a product of our commitment to make changes in the way we manage our environment, protect health and secure livelihoods and economic security for all. We believe strongly that we can and must do things differently. Our aim is to bring you news, perspectives and knowledge to prepare you to change the world. We believe information is a powerful driver for the new tomorrow.
© Copyright Down To Earth 2024. All rights reserved.

source

Related Post

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *