Study Shows Decrease in a
Medicinal Use of Animals
by Sherry Morse and Patricia Collier
A recent study has
shown that demand for at least some animal body parts
traditionally used to treat impotence has decreased dramatically since
Viagra first became available in 1998.
Worldwide sales of
reindeer antler velvet, which is used in China to make an
anti-impotence drug, declined by approximately 72 percent between 1997 and
1998.
In addition, demand
for seal penises, which are thought to increase
virility, decreased by about one-half between 1996 and 1998, and became
almost nonexistent by 2000.
"Because market
forces are driving the overcollection of and subsequent
threat to some species, the elimination of these market forces may prove to
be the most effective conservation solution," stated University of New South
Wales psychology professor Dr. Bill von Hippel, who conducted the study
along with his brother, University of Alaska biologist Frank von Hippel.
Along with seals and reindeer, pipefish, seahorses, sea cucumbers and elk
are among the animals from which body parts are taken in order to prepare
impotence remedies.
"While Viagra has
enormous potential, the transition (away from using animal
body parts) is clearly not happening quickly enough,"
Animals Asia
Foundation founder and Chief Executive Officer Jill Robinson said.The
reasons for this, according to Robinson, are that:
-
ingredients
obtained from animal body parts are often added to black
market versions of Viagra for sale in China
-
many practitioners of
traditional Chinese medicine don't believe modern
drugs can replace remedies that have been in use for thousands of years
-
animal body parts are
used to make a wide variety of traditional medicines
"The von Hippels have used two small snapshots to interpret a very broad
landscape," stated Craig Hoover, who is the Deputy Director of
TRAFFIC, a
wildlife trade monitoring network. "While they note that sales of seal
penises and reindeer antlers have declined since 1998, their research is not
convincing that there is any connection to the introduction of Viagra."
"The evidence is still merely suggestive, but it'll be nice if it turns out
to be true," Dr. von Hippel said
.
(c) 2003 Animal News Centre
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