pangolin, India

Pangolin poaching: the brutal reality

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Video footage shows the horrifying moment a terrified pangolin is killed for its scales in Assam, India. Pangolin scales are sold on the black market for traditional Asian medicine

The upsetting mobile phone footage was captured by an undercover researcher working for us and WildCRU (Wildlife Conservation Research Unit, University of Oxford). 

Together, we completed a two-year study into traditional hunting practices in Assam.

Pangolin poaching: A horrifying ordeal

The terrified pangolin hides from hunters in a hollowed-out tree, clinging for her life as her tail is tugged.  

The hunters use axes to cut the tree, but failing to remove the desperate animal, they light a fire to smoke her out.

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A pangolin suffering in the hands of a poacher

As the pangolin starts to suffocate and lose consciousness, it makes a bolt for freedom but is captured, bagged and taken to a hut where the next stage of the ordeal takes place. 

The pangolin is repeatedly bludgeoned with a machete until it can barely move. While bleeding, it is then thrown into a cauldron of boiling water, where its tragic struggle comes to an end.  

Join our wildlife community to find out how you can help protect innocent animals like pangolins.

The world’s most trafficked mammal 

Pangolins have earned the reputation as one of the most illegally trafficked mammal. There are eight species of pangolin, four in Asia and four in Africa.  

While there is plenty of coverage of the scale of pangolin poaching and the illegal pangolin tradeour footage reveals just how cruel and painful the practice is for these animals. 

Pangolins are also known as scaly anteaters. They’re the only mammals covered in scales, which can protect them from predators.

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Pangolin scales are made of keratin – the same protein that makes up human fingernails

Ironically, it’s these scales that are the driving force behind the illicit pangolin trade, which has put all pangolin species at high risk of extinction. 

Reliable estimates of how many pangolins remain in the wild are lacking, although it’s thought that over a million individual pangolins were taken from the wild between 2000 and 2013. 

You can read more about the terrible trade of pangolin poaching in our report, Suffering at scale.

Why are pangolins being poached? 

Pangolin scales are used in traditional Asian medicine, particularly in China and Vietnam. 

They are believed to have curative properties; however, pangolin scales are made of keratin, the same material that makes human fingernails and hair, and have no proven medicinal value. 

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Pangolin scales being prepped for use in traditional medicine

Pangolin meat is also considered to be a delicacy in some countries, and the scales are also used as decorations for rituals and jewelry. 

We need to tackle illegal trading 

Not only does illegal wildlife trading perpetuate cruelty against wild animals, it also poses serious human health hazards. Dr. Neil D’Cruze, our Global Wildlife Adviser and lead researcher said:

“This footage shines a spotlight on how truly shocking the practice of hunting pangolins is. Not only is this a major conservation issue – it’s a devastating animal welfare concern.

If we want to protect pangolins from pain and suffering in the countries they come from, we need to tackle the illegal poaching trade.” 

Professor David Macdonald, WildCRU, department of Zoology, University of Oxford, said: 

“Increasing demand driven by traditional Asian medicine is making pangolins a lucrative catch.  

“It’s easy to see why they are being commercially exploited, as scales from just one pangolin can offer a life changing sum of money for people in these communities, but it’s in no way sustainable. Wild pangolin numbers are beginning to plummet.” 

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How to help end pangolin poaching

With your help, World Animal Protection has the power to change the outcomes for wild animals. Following the COVID-19 outbreak, World Animal Protection has already mobilized Youzan, an important retail science and technology service provider, and YaoPharma, a pharmaceutical company, to sign wildlife-friendly and wildlife-free medicine pledges. We need supporters like you to ensure that we continue to make a difference and end other forms of ongoing wildlife trade and abuse, such as pangolin poaching.

To combat the global trade of their bodies and scales and to protect pangolins from the unimaginable suffering they endure we are calling for:  

  • Stronger enforcement of national and international laws  
  • Removal of pangolins from the Pharmacopoeia of the People’s Republic of China – the traditional medicine handbook for the industry  
  • Investment in and promotion of herbal and synthetic alternatives   
  • Combined and coordinated efforts by governments, NGOs and the traditional Asian medicine community to eliminate consumer demand for pangolin-based traditional Asian medicines, particularly in China and Vietnam   
  • Support for alternative livelihoods, alleviation of poverty and education programs within rural communities wherever pangolins are found globally, to stop the slaughter.  

Find out more about pangolin poaching in our report, Suffering at scale.

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Not only is this a major conservation issue – it’s a devastating animal welfare concern. – Dr Neil D’Cruze, our Global Wildlife Adviser