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http://news.bbc.co.uk/hi/english/world/asia-pacific/newsid_1795000/1795388.s

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Friday, 1 February, 2002, 10:07 GMT

Chefs to help save exotic species

 

Turtles, snakes and pangolins should come off the menu

 

By BBC science reporter Julian Siddle

 

The China Wildlife Conservation Association has launched an unusual campaign

aimed at saving endangered animals.

 

The group is asking professional cooks to sign a declaration that they will

not prepare food using endangered species.

 

Species are threatened because of human consumption

 

Jim Harkness, Worldwide Fund for Nature

The agency hopes to collect at least three million signatures to raise

awareness of the practice of eating such animals.

 

Eating the meat of many exotic or rare animals is associated with health

benefits or higher social status.

 

As a result there is a thriving trade in many rural areas of China, where

wild animals are trapped and sold to city restaurants.

 

The China Wildlife Conservation Association hopes that enrolling chefs in

its campaign will help halt this trade.

 

Widespread problem

 

Jim Harkness, who heads the association's sister organisation, the Worldwide

Fund for Nature, in Beijing said: " There are a number of species, especially

reptiles, not only in China but now, increasingly, in all of South East Asia

that are threatened precisely because of direct human consumption. "

 

These endangered animals include snakes, tortoises, turtles, and the

pangolin, a type of scaly anteater.

 

Mr Harkness says that though eating these animals remains popular amongst

older diners, younger people are turning their backs on such dishes.

 

The government too, he says, is sending out signals about the importance of

conserving rare wild animals, in the form of increasing regulations and bans

on their sale as food. The tradition of eating exotic or rare animals is

putting some species at risk of extinction.

 

WATCH/LISTEN

ON THIS STORY

Jim Harkness, Worldwide Fund for Nature

" Many young people are turning away from traditional delicacies "

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