Abstract

The ball python (Python regius) is the world’s most commonly traded python species for the “exotic” pet industry. The majority of these live snakes are produced via a number of python farms in West Africa that have been in operation since the 1960s and involved with “ranching” operations since the 1990s. However, to date no thorough taxonomic review or genetic studies have been conducted within its range, despite the fact that the evaluation of a species’ genetic variability is generally considered mandatory for effective management. We used mtDNA sequence data and eight polymorphic microsatellite markers to assess the underlying population genetic structure and to test the potential of the nuclear markers to assign farm individuals to wild reference populations in southern Togo. Despite the relatively large distances between sample locations, no significant genetic population structure was found, either in mtDNA sequence data or in the microsatellite data. Instead, our data indicate considerable gene flow among the locations. The absence of a distinct population subdivision may have resulted from an anthropogenic driven admixture of populations associated with commercial wildlife trade activity in recent decades. Given the ongoing largely unregulated nature of the commercial ranching of ball pythons in West Africa, should a wild release component continue, as a first measure we recommend that the Management Authorities should develop an action plan with specific release protocols for python farms to minimise any potential negative conservation impacts resulting from admixture (genetic pollution) between farmed and wild individuals.

Highlights

  • The ball python (Python regius) is native to open woodlands and savannahs of western Africa south of the Sahara extending east into north-western Uganda, and has been recorded from at least 18 countries (Barker and Barker 2006; Uetz et al 2019)

  • This study found that: (1) the majority of surveyed hunters were not aware of national quotas relating to this CITES listed species; (2) that their harvest activity involved illegal cross border collection and trade activities in other nearby range states (i.e., Benin, Ghana and Nigeria); and (3) that the release of gravid females collected in the wild and a proportion (20%, see above) of the resulting neonates was not monitored appropriately, with snakes being released without full care and consideration given to key aspects, such as source location and the habitat of release sites (D’Cruze et al, in prep.)

  • The main goal of this work is: (1) explore whether the genetic structure and divergence of wild ball python populations in Togo is consistent with their naturally expected low gene flow given their assumed low dispersal capacity; (2) explore the role that commercial trade activities may have played to gain information on whether, and if so to what extent, ranching activities operating from facilities in python “farms” in Togo are impacting on wild populations; and (3) provide recommendations that can help inform existing and future initiatives focused on the conservation of this species

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Summary

Introduction

The ball python (Python regius) is native to open woodlands and savannahs of western Africa south of the Sahara extending east into north-western Uganda, and has been recorded from at least 18 countries (Barker and Barker 2006; Uetz et al 2019). The ball python is the world’s most common species of python traded internationally for the commercial exotic pet trade (Barker and Barker 2006; D’Cruze et al, in prep.). Since 1997, several West African States within the range of ball python have established quotas for export, the majority of which relate to live specimens intended for commercial purposes (Fig. 1). Between 1997 and 2018, 3,628,030 live specimens were reported from the main exporting countries combined (Togo, n = 1,252,500; Benin, n = 1,479,530; Ghana, n = 867,500) (CITES Trade Database, https:// trade.cites.org). In the same period the total export quota for wild sourced live specimens was 206,101 (Togo, n = 33,501; Benin, n = 32,600; Ghana, n = 140,000) (UNEP 2019). Export quotas set by other West African nations are relatively negligible in terms of volumes (UNEP 2019; Fig. 1)

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