Robbery, vandalism, murder: Crimes happen
every day. But people aren't the only victims of illegal
activity. Bad guys can also target animals. And since animals
can't tell police officers what they've seen, these are some
of the toughest cases to solve.
Particularly challenging are the crimes that
involve poaching—taking animals from the wild that are
protected by law. Poachers can make a lot of money selling
meat, tusks, fur, fins, and other parts of protected animals.
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Federal inspectors took this
suitcase from a traveler passing through Miami's
airport. Inside were poached shark fins and seahorses
that NOAA enforcement officers later sent to researchers
at Nova Southeastern University in Florida for
identification. |
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R. Horn/Nova Southeastern Univ.
Oceanographic Ctr. |
Poaching can devastate even large wildlife
populations if too many animals are taken in any year or from
any area. The problem becomes even more serious when a species
is endangered. Then, losing even a few animals can make it
harder for the species to survive.
What's really bad is that poaching creates an
unfortunate cycle: As the animals become more rare, their
parts become more valuable. So, poachers earn even greater
rewards for their collection of protected species.
Now, scientists are helping fight back. Using
the genetic material DNA, they are finding ways to clinch
hard-to-solve cases involving a wide range of creatures, from
elephants to seahorses.
If you've ever read a legal thriller or
watched shows on TV such as CSI: Crime Scene
Investigation, you know that DNA plays a big part in
solving human crimes. The molecule appears in every cell. Like
fingerprints, DNA is unique to every person. So, by analyzing
DNA in blood, saliva, or hair left behind at the scene of a
crime, detectives can identify criminals and victims.
When authorities find poached animal parts,
they aren't usually interested in identifying individual
creatures. Instead, they want to know what species the parts
belong to. That may not be obvious if all you have is a bit of
meat, bone, or perhaps a fish fin. DNA can also prove helpful
in figuring out where an animal came from. That's because
members of one local group of animals tend to share more DNA
in common with each other than they do with more distant
groups of their species.
Based on concepts such as these, scientists
are developing new tests to untangle complicated webs of
animal-related crime.
Tusk trackers
Elephants have been particularly devastated by
poachers in recent decades. Between 1979 and 1987, poachers
killed hundreds of thousands of wild elephants in Africa and
Asia. This poaching reduced the animals' numbers by more than
half, says Samuel Wasser, director of the Center for
Conservation Biology at the University of Washington, Seattle.
The motivation? Ivory. Elephant tusks are made
of the hard, white material, which has long been used in
jewelry and art, among other applications.
Poaching slowed down after an international
ban on the ivory trade was passed in 1989. For a variety of
reasons, however, the practice started creeping up again a few
years later. By 2005, Wasser says, "the illegal ivory trade
had come back with a vengeance."
Even though it's against the law to buy newly
harvested ivory, people prize it so much that some are willing
to buy it illegally. Such sales are said to be on the "black
market." In the past few years, the black-market price of
ivory has quadrupled to about $850 per kilogram (2.2 pounds).
A tusk can weigh 11 kg (24 pounds) or more.
Tens of thousands of elephants are dying each
year as a result. There are fewer than 500,000 elephants
living in the wild today.
Elephant poaching is hard to squelch because
hunters often work in remote areas. Middlemen gather tusks
from a variety of places. And well-hidden shipments follow
complicated routes to destinations far from where they
started. A single shipment can contain hundreds of tusks,
thousands of pounds, and many millions of dollars worth of
ivory.
Authorities intercept just 10 percent of these
shipments, Wasser estimates. But even when officials retrieve
the ivory, they usually don't know where it came from.
To answer this question, Wasser has been
looking for clues in elephant DNA. First, he collected
elephant dung from 28 regions in 16 countries throughout
Africa. He analyzed DNA in the dung samples. Then, he used the
results to start mapping connections between an elephant's DNA
and its home range. Finally, he used statistics to fill in the
blanks (see "Gene Sleuths Track Down Ivory
Sources").
"I've been working for 8 years on building
this map," Wasser says. "It has taken a while, but we've done
it."
But poachers trade tusks, not poop. And
getting the genetic material out of ivory is more difficult.
That's because the outside of a tusk is made of dead cells,
while the DNA is in living cells on the inside of the tusk.
But smashing or drilling into the tusk destroys the DNA.
To overcome this problem, Wasser developed a
way to extract DNA from ivory under supercold conditions. With
liquid nitrogen, he was able to freeze the material. Then, he
used a magnet and alternating magnetic fields to grind up the
sample without destroying the DNA.
Using the technique, Wasser helped trace the
origins of one of the largest ivory seizures ever made. The
shipment, which contained 13,000 pounds (5,900 kilograms) of
ivory, was seized in Singapore in 2002.
Wasser's analysis showed that nearly all the
seized ivory had come from a small region in Zambia. It was an
important discovery because wildlife officials originally
thought the shipment's contents had come from many different
places.
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Investigators can use genetic
techniques to trace tusks or their ivory back to the
population of elephants from which they were
poached. |
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Photodisc |
Findings like these are helping authorities
narrow the hunt for elephant hunters.
"DNA can really help us stop the [ivory] trade
at its source," Wasser says. "For the first time, we don't
just have information about shipping and receiving, but about
where the ivory comes from. This has completely changed the
way law enforcement thinks about how to deal with these
cases."
Something's fishy
Authorities are also getting better at nabbing
shark poachers, thanks to Mahmood Shivji, a conservation
geneticist at a shark conservation consortium at Nova
Southeastern University's Oceanographic Center in Dania Beach,
Fla. Trained as both an oceanographer and geneticist, Shivji
is now a DNA detective of the sea.
There are more than 400 species of sharks in
the world's oceans, Shivji says. Fishermen kill about 50 of
those fish species for their fins, which people eat. The fins
of some species are especially valuable. Sometimes sharks are
also killed for their meat.
As a result of hunting pressures, shark
numbers have dropped 70 percent in the past 2 decades. Many
populations are now threatened and a few are even endangered.
It is legal to fish for most sharks,
especially if the fish will be sold for meat. However, most
sharks are killed for their fins—not meat. Fishers haul in the
animals, slice off their fins and then throw the rest of the
still living shark back in the water to slowly die.
It's gruesome. It's also a tremendous waste of
majestic animals that help keep ocean ecosystems healthy.
That's why it is now illegal to kill a shark in the United
States—unless the entire animal is kept for sale. Any ship
containing fins without the rest of the animal is
automatically guilty of shark "finning", an illegal activity
(poaching).
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On Aug. 23, NOAA took possession of
the "fishing boat" King Diamond
II. Although it had no fishing gear on board, it
was carrying 32 tons of rotting shark fins. Nearly all
had been neatly bundled into roped bales. Shown here is
just a tiny portion of the loot that had been stored on
deck—presumably to retard further decay. The loot was
taken into custody and the U.S. boat's crew was arrested
for illegal shark finning. |
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U.S. Coast
Guard |
To protect sharks from poachers, Shivji says,
authorities must first figure out which species are being hit
hardest. But that's hard to do when the only evidence is
fins—which pretty much look alike, regardless of which shark
species they came from.
"Markets are supplied from all over the
world," he says. "No one is keeping track of whether
populations in certain parts of the world are being overfished
relative to other populations."
With those two goals in mind, Shivji started
by studying DNA from 70 shark species, including all the
varieties that end up in the fin trade. He found a small
region of DNA that differs between species. Then, he created a
simple test that identifies species on the basis of DNA taken
from a meat or fin sample.
Next, Shivji found a different region of DNA
that varies between members of the same species. He developed
another test that identifies whether a sand tiger shark, for
example, came from the northwest Atlantic, the southwest
Atlantic, Australia, or South Africa. Finally, he combined the
two tests.
The biggest advantage of Shivji's technique is
that it spits out results quickly. In just 2 days, he says, he
and his team can identify the sources, by geography and
species, for 50 fins.
Right now, the rapid tests can reliably
identify 30 shark species. And they can distinguish between
geographic populations of two of those species—sand tiger
sharks and porbeagle sharks.
Shivji is working on incorporating more groups
into the tests. And he wants to make the process even faster
by eventually replacing much of the work that humans do with
robotic technologies.
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This Asian market boasts a range of
shark fins sold by size and type. A recent estimate
indicates that some 40 million sharks are harvested each
year for their fins, which would translate into an
estimated 1.7 million metric tons of dead
sharks. |
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Shelley C. Clarke/Imperial College
London |
The technique has already helped solve a
number of suspicious cases for the National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration. NOAA's Office for Law Enforcement
is responsible for inspecting fishing boats that enter U.S.
ports. Shivji is also working on cases in foreign waters and
helping train foreign colleagues.
As the tests get better and faster, word is
spreading that it might not be so easy to get away with shark
poaching anymore.
"Now, fishermen can't say, 'They're never
going to be able to tell the difference'" between legal and
illegal catches, Shivji says. This "is having a positive
impact on reducing the amount of illegal activity."
It usually takes a long time for basic
research to make an impact in the real world, Shivji adds. But
animal-DNA detective work has quickly made the transition from
science lab to crime lab. Scientists are now doing similar
work to protect seahorses, seals, and other animals.
If the world's poaching victims could talk,
they would probably thank these scientists for their detective
work.
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