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International trade in African grey parrots banned

  • All cross-border commercial trade in wild-caught African grey parrots is now banned.
  • Captive-bred birds can be traded, but only from breeding facilities that are registered with CITES.
  • Currently, most African grey parrot exports originate in the Congo basin, according to WWF.

African grey parrots — talented mimics and one of the world’s most trafficked birds — now have a reason to cheer.

At a conservation meeting in South Africa last week, countries voted to ban all international commercial trade in wild-caught African grey parrots by including the species in the Appendix I of the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora (CITES). Captive-bred birds will be allowed to be traded, but only from breeding facilities that are registered with CITES.

Seven range countries Angola, Chad, Gabon, Guinea, Nigeria, Senegal and Togo, along with the European Union and the United States of America sponsored the proposal at the 17th meeting of the Conference of the Parties (CoP) to CITES in Johannesburg, South Africa.

“If this bird could talk — and it certainly can — the African grey parrot would say thank you,” Susan Lieberman, VP of International Policy at the Wildlife Conservation Society (WCS) and head of the WCS delegation at CITES, said in a statement. “Now with the protection of Appendix I, and the enhanced enforcement that is needed, the voice of the African grey parrot will not be silenced across the great forests of Africa.”

African grey parrot’s recently split sister species -- the Timneh Parrot (Psittacus timneh) -- is likely suffering a similar fate across its range. Photo from Wikimedia Commons CC BY-SA 2.0 by Peter Fuchs.
African grey parrot’s recently split sister species — the Timneh Parrot (Psittacus timneh) — is likely suffering a similar fate across its range. Photo by Peter Fuchs Wikimedia Commons, licensed under CC BY-SA 2.0.

African grey parrots are excellent mimics. Alex, a famous African grey parrot for example, could mimic over 100 human words. Unsurprisingly, these parrots are extremely popular as pets.

But these gregarious birds can also be trapped easily from the wild in large numbers, resulting in unrestricted trapping for the pet trade. This unregulated trade, however, has decimated wild parrot populations across Africa. In Ghana, for instance, nearly 99 percent of African grey parrots have disappeared from the country’s forests since 1992, a study published last year found. Most other range countries have also reported a population decline of around 50 percent over three generations. In fact, the species is now extremely rare or locally extinct in Benin, Burundi, Guinea, Guinea-Bissau, Kenya, Rwanda, Tanzania and Togo. Following its widespread decline, the African grey parrot was up-listed to Vulnerable in the IUCN Red List in 2012.

Illegal trade in these birds is also rampant under the guise of legal trade, the proposal submitted by the range countries notes, thanks to “falsified or fraudulent CITES permits, clandestine shipments, or through false identification of wild-caught birds as captive-bred.”

According to the proposal, several range countries have reported large exports of captive-bred specimens despite there being no known breeding facilities in these countries. For example, some 7,266 birds were reported as captive-bred specimens by Guinea, Central African Republic, ROC, Côte d’Ivoire, Liberia, Cameroon and Democratic Republic of Congo between 2008 and 2013. However, no African grey parrot captive breeding facility is known to exist in these countries.

Currently, most African grey parrot exports originate in the Congo basin, according to WWF.

“Fraud and corruption have enabled traffickers to vastly exceed current quotas and continue to harvest unsustainable numbers of African grey parrots from Congo’s forests to feed the illegal trade,” Colman O Criodain, WWF Global Wildlife Policy Manager, said in a statement. “Banning the trade will make it easier for law enforcement agencies to crack down on the poachers and smugglers, and give the remaining wild populations some much-needed breathing space.”

International pet trade is decimating African grey populations in the wild. Photo from Wikimedia Commons CC BY-SA 3.0.
International pet trade is decimating African grey parrot populations in the wild. Photo by L.Miguel Bugallo Sánchez, from Wikimedia Commons, licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0.
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