Submitted by tandemuis365 t3_11bvz24 in worldnews
WyrdHarper t1_ja0tj1b wrote
Reply to comment by FastWalkingShortGuy in Amazon faces a lawsuit over products that fuel the donkey skin trade. by tandemuis365
Yes, African Wild Asses are critically endangered. Read the article; these aren’t just domestic donkeys.
The donkey hide trade is also a major route by which zoonotic infectious diseases, including Brucellosis and Leptospirosis, can be spread. There are also concerns for its ability to bring in African Horse Sickness and Burkholderia spp. diseases which would be devastating to our domestic equine species and economically damaging.
It’s also used to spread money via illegal backchannels to fund criminal organizations.
Donkey products can be used in some cases in the United States; however, because they are not considered food and fiber animals there are fewer regulations documenting medications that have been used in them, including drug residues which can kill humans.
persfinthrowa t1_ja0vx86 wrote
I’m not seeing anything in the article about disease or African Wild Asses?
WyrdHarper t1_ja0xkmi wrote
It talks about South Africa. The illegal donkey hide trade has been going on for years so not everything is in this specific one. This is not a new thing.
Various donkey and ass species in Africa get processed for hides and other byproducts and sold to parts of Europe or SEA (especially Thailand) due to their value in traditional medicines where the information about the source is laundered and they are sold globally.
The parent comment was quite ignorant about this well-known issue and its global public and animal health issues.
Mayor__Defacto t1_ja1i1o6 wrote
There’s 570 of them. It’s way, way more efficient to just raise domesticated donkeys as livestock than poach them from the wild lol. In Central Asia you can buy one for 80 bucks a head.
[deleted] t1_ja11vzv wrote
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Head-Investigator846 t1_ja2ys9d wrote
African Wild Asses are not native to South Africa. They live on the whole other side of the African continent. the article doesn’t mention anything about the African Wild Ass.
persfinthrowa t1_ja105g6 wrote
Okay thanks for the info. This is certainly the first most in here including myself are hearing about this issue. If you have time, I’d suggest updating your other comment with sources so people could learn more. I legitimately thought everything you said was pointed out in this article.
TranscodedMusic t1_ja1b3bf wrote
African Wild Asses is one of my favorite films - it pains me that it’s now endangered 😔
redditEATdicks t1_ja1hk03 wrote
Nah they all went from the pole to waitressing at waffle house, they didn't die off, just moved native habitats.
Amauri14 t1_ja1yypu wrote
I have never checked that one, maybe I should give it a watch before watching Big Wet Asses 26.
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