1. Uncovering the magnitude of African pangolin poaching with extensive nanopore DNA genotyping of seized scales.
- Author
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Yeo D, Chan AHJ, Hiong KC, Ong J, Ng JY, Lim JM, Zhang W, Lim SR, Fernandez CJ, Wong AM, Lee BPY, Khoo MDY, Cheng TXW, Lim BTM, Yeo HHT, Tan MMQ, Sng WBG, Adam SS, Ang WF, How CB, Xie R, Wasser SK, Finch KN, Loo AHB, Yap HH, Leong CC, and Er KBH
- Subjects
- Humans, Animals, Genotype, Conservation of Natural Resources methods, DNA, Seizures, Pangolins, Nanopores
- Abstract
Trade in pangolins is illegal, and yet tons of their scales and products are seized at various ports. These large seizures are challenging to process and comprehensively genotype for upstream provenance tracing and species identification for prosecution. We implemented a scalable DNA barcoding pipeline in which rapid DNA extraction and MinION sequencing were used to genotype a substantial proportion of pangolin scales subsampled from 2 record shipments seized in Singapore in 2019 (37.5 t). We used reference sequences to match the scales to phylogeographical regions of origin. In total, we identified 2346 cytochrome b (cytb) barcodes of white-bellied (Phataginus tricuspis) (from 1091 scales), black-bellied (Phataginus tetradactyla) (227 scales), and giant (Smutsia gigantea) (1028 scales) pangolins. Haplotype diversity was higher for P. tricuspis scales (121 haplotypes, 66 novel) than that for P. tetradactyla (22 haplotypes, 15 novel) and S. gigantea (25 haplotypes, 21 novel) scales. Of the novel haplotypes, 74.2% were likely from western and west-central Africa, suggesting potential resurgence of poaching and newly exploited populations in these regions. Our results illustrate the utility of extensively subsampling large seizures and outline an efficient molecular approach for rapid genetic screening that should be accessible to most forensic laboratories and enforcement agencies., (© 2023 Nparks and The Authors. Conservation Biology published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of Society for Conservation Biology.)
- Published
- 2024
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