Abstract

Societal Impact StatementA wide variety of plant species are threatened by illegal wildlife trade (IWT), and yet plants receive scant attention in IWT policy and research, a matter of pressing global concern. This review examines how “plant blindness” manifests within policy and research on IWT, with serious and detrimental effects for biodiversity conservation. We suggest several key points: (a) perhaps with the exception of the illegal timber market, plants are overlooked in IWT policy and research; (b) there is insufficient attention from funding agencies to the presence and persistence of illegal trade in plants; and (c) these absences are at least in part resultant from plant blindness as codified in governmental laws defining the meaning of “wildlife.” Summary This review investigates the ways in which “plant blindness,” first described by Wandersee and Schussler (1999, p. 82) as “the misguided anthropocentric ranking of plants as inferior to animals,” intersects with the contemporary boom in research and policy on illegal wildlife trade (IWT). We argue that plants have been largely ignored within this emerging conservation arena, with serious and detrimental effects for biodiversity conservation. With the exception of the illegal trade in timber, we show that plants are absent from much emerging scholarship, and receive scant attention by US and UK funding agencies often driving global efforts to address illegal wildlife trade, despite the high levels of threat many plants face. Our article concludes by discussing current challenges posed by plant blindness in IWT policy and research, but also suggests reasons for cautious optimism in addressing this critical issue for plant conservation.

Highlights

  • P ants receive proportionate y far ess research attention and funding in re ation to the threats they face compared to anima s an imba ance a so mirrored in nationa endangered species aws As Havens et a describe at the time of their research of species isted on the United States US Endangered Species Act were p ants yet they garnered ess than of the federa funding for protecting en dangered species

  • P ant b indness was bui t into the ear iest of federa wi d ife protection aws in the US and so imp icit y reinforced the hierar chica privi eging of anima conservation over p ant conservation

  • A et a I ega wi d ife trade and the persistence of p ant b indness Plants, People, Planet. 2019;00:1–10. https doi org ppp

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Summary

| INTRODUCTION

P ants are i ega y traded for a variety of reasons inc uding the production of essentia oi s medicines and perfumes Jenkins. P ants receive proportionate y far ess research attention and funding in re ation to the threats they face compared to anima s an imba ance a so mirrored in nationa endangered species aws As Havens et a describe at the time of their research of species isted on the United States US Endangered Species Act were p ants yet they garnered ess than of the federa funding for protecting en dangered species. P ant b indness was bui t into the ear iest of federa wi d ife protection aws in the US and so imp icit y reinforced the hierar chica privi eging of anima conservation over p ant conservation. A major point of discussion were the cha enges of ensuring the meaningfu interest in p ant conservation among po icymakers and non governmenta organizations NGOs despite the threat of i ega trade to p ants they represent a surprising y sma part of CITES negotiation agendas e g the CITES CoP pro visiona agenda and are weak y represented by the eading

| CONCLUSION
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