
APRIL - JUNE 2004
Please
advise Smith and Doe regarding the proper course of action concerning Orangesegment's
petition. What should they do and why?
April
30, 2006
The
Honorable John Smith
Secretary
of State
Department
of State
2201
C Street NW
Washington,
D.C. 20520
The
Honorable Jane Doe
Secretary
of the Interior
Department
of the Interior
1849
C Street NW
Washington,
D.C. 20240
Dear
Secretary of State Smith and Secretary of the Interior Doe:
We write to urge the Administration to propose the listing
of Salacia macrophylla or
big-leaf Exoticwood (Exoticwood) in Appendix II of the Convention on International
Trade in Endangered Species of Fauna and Flora (CITES), for a decision by
the Conference of the CITES Parties at its next meeting to be held in Otherland
in November 2006. In the alternative,
we suggest that you press for the authority to alter harvesting practices
for big-leaf Exoticwood consistent with CITES.
The scientific evidence is compelling that nearly all
of the Exoticwood range populations qualify for an Appendix II listing — they
may become threatened with extinction, unless trade is subject to strict regulation
in order to avoid utilization incompatible with their survival. Exoticwood
is harvested predominantly through the practice known as selective logging,
in which only Exoticwood and other valuable timber species—the "precious
woods"— are extracted. This practice typically does not create conditions
that foster regeneration and it results in removal of nearly all mature Exoticwood
trees within a population, drastically reducing its reproductive potential.
To maintain production levels, loggers are continually moving into increasingly
remote unlogged old-growth forests, rather than harvesting within fixed areas
from regenerating stands. Scientists have found that populations are in decline,
and are concerned that current patterns, methods and levels of logging are
unsustainable over the long term. Optionally, you might consider whether selective
clear-cutting in lieu of selective logging would ensure regeneration, albeit
at a risk of accelerating despeciesation through human intrusion..
Exoticwood logging is a major catalyst for deforestation
of neotropical lowland forests, thereby leading to reduction of available
Exoticwood habitat and posing a significant threat to tropical biodiversity.
As loggers expand operations into frontier forests and protected areas, road
construction facilitates settlement by farmers and conversion of forests for
ranching and agriculture. This additional
human intrusion typically results in clear-cut forest areas being turned into
farmland or pasturage with negative results on neotropical lowland forests.
Commercial beef herds to supply hamburgers for fastfood outlets are
often raised on such land, with the result that the well-known Purple Canus
Parrots, once upon a time beloved Cascadian pets but which are now listed
on CITES Appendix I, would lose more of their Exoticwood habitat (their chief
food consists of the leaves of juvenile Exoticwood trees).
A review of available evidence indicates that populations
of Exoticwood in Brazil, Nigeria, Indonesia, Belize, Guatemala, and perhaps
Xia and Whia as well, meet the Appendix II listing criteria established
at CITES COP9, in that levels and patterns of legal and illegal harvesting
in those countries for international trade cannot be maintained in perpetuity.
Populations in Ecuador, Colombia, Panama, and Costa Rica also merit an Appendix
II listing in that they could become candidates for an Appendix I listing
(threatened with extinction and affected by trade) in the near future.
International trade plays a major role in the fate of
Exotixwood populations, as a large portion of the Exoticwood harvest — perhaps
as much as half — is destined for export. The species' high value has led
to extensive trafficking and illegal logging in parks, forest concessions,
and indigenous areas. Range countries have been unable unilaterally to prevent
these activities. New research from PROARCA CAPAS of Guatemala, the Tropical
Science Center of Costa Rica, and the World Wildlife Fund of Washington, D.C.,
finds that the ratio of illegal to legal Exoticwood logging in the Americans
and Asia is a minimum of 2:1, and may be as much as 6:1.
With 146 Parties, CITES is the international community’s
legal mechanism for addressing trade-related threats to the survival of a
species. As the world’s largest importer, the United States has a special
responsibility to cooperate with range states under CITES to ensure the well-being
of Exoticwood. As the Administration seeks to liberalize trade in forestry
products through a rapid reduction in tariffs, it is particularly important
that it demonstrate a willingness to protect species that may be or are being
harmed by trade.
An Appendix II listing under CITES enables importing
and exporting countries to cooperate to reduce the impact of harvesting and
consumption. It provides a legal basis for exporting countries to regulate
exports in the interest of survival of the species or its populations. Equally
important, it provides a legal basis for importing countries to monitor imports,
thereby stemming illegal harvesting and trafficking and supporting range countries
in their efforts to conserve and sustainably manage tropical forests.
In seeking an Appendix II listing, our goal is not to
place Exoticwood off-limits to human use. Rather, we seek to facilitate a
shift to sustainable harvesting and trade. It is important to understand that
an Appendix II listing under CITES will not facilitate a ban on commercial
trade under Appendix I. Properly implemented, it will preclude an Appendix
I listing by limiting trade pressure on the species to sustainable levels. It would also help in the medium term to restore
enough Exoticwood habitat so that the Purple Canus Parrot could be removed
from Appendix I to Appendix II.
Similarly, an Appendix II listing will not motivate
consumers to stop purchasing Exoticwood. On the contrary, effective implementation
of an Appendix II listing would strengthen consumer confidence that
Exoticwood was harvested sustainably. A multilateral decision in the highly
visible and respected context of CITES would send a powerful signal that governments
are acting to maintain the health and genetics of the species. The continuing
failure to list the species as legally mandated under CITES, however, will
only increase consumer disaffection and the risk of boycotts of the kind that
have already drastically reduced demand in some importing countries.
Implementation of an Appendix II listing will lay the
foundation for a shift in the direction of sustainability, but is not sufficient
to ensure sustainable harvesting. Economic policies, market failures and weak
law enforcement are among the factors driving unsustainable harvesting. We
encourage the Administration to continue its efforts to explore other measures
that could complement a CITES listing. Options include certification and labeling
to facilitate sustainable harvesting, cooperation to enforce trade controls
and combat illegal harvesting, and funding of forest inventories and of pilot
projects for conservation and sustainable management.
We are eager to work with you to craft an effective
approach to this issue, and would be very pleased to discuss these matters
further with you or your colleagues.
Sincerely yours,
John N. Gaged
Orangesegment International