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Poisonous pitohuis as pets

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  03 December 2024

Vincent Nijman*
Affiliation:
IUCN/SSC Asian Songbird Trade Specialist Group and Oxford Wildlife Trade Research Group, Oxford Brookes University, Oxford, UK
Abdullah Abdullah
Affiliation:
Universitas Sya Kuala, Banda Aceh, Indonesia
Ahmad Ardiansyah
Affiliation:
Little Fireface Project, Cipaganti, Garut, Indonesia
Jessica Chavez
Affiliation:
IUCN/SSC Asian Songbird Trade Specialist Group and Oxford Wildlife Trade Research Group, Oxford Brookes University, Oxford, UK
Amanda Fairey
Affiliation:
IUCN/SSC Asian Songbird Trade Specialist Group and Oxford Wildlife Trade Research Group, Oxford Brookes University, Oxford, UK
Katherine Hedger
Affiliation:
Little Fireface Project, Cipaganti, Garut, Indonesia
Abdullah Langgeng
Affiliation:
Little Fireface Project, Cipaganti, Garut, Indonesia Kyoto University Wildlife Research Center, Kyoto, Japan
S. Sunny Nelson
Affiliation:
IUCN/SSC Asian Songbird Trade Specialist Group and Oxford Wildlife Trade Research Group, Oxford Brookes University, Oxford, UK Lincoln Park Zoo, Chicago, USA Monitor Conservation Research Society, Big Lake Ranch, Canada
I. Nyoman Aji Duranegara Payuse
Affiliation:
Universitas Warmadewa, Denpasar, Indonesia
Chris R. Shepherd
Affiliation:
IUCN/SSC Asian Songbird Trade Specialist Group and Oxford Wildlife Trade Research Group, Oxford Brookes University, Oxford, UK Monitor Conservation Research Society, Big Lake Ranch, Canada
K. Anne-Isola Nekaris
Affiliation:
IUCN/SSC Asian Songbird Trade Specialist Group and Oxford Wildlife Trade Research Group, Oxford Brookes University, Oxford, UK Little Fireface Project, Cipaganti, Garut, Indonesia Anglia Ruskin University, Cambridge, UK
*
Corresponding author: Vincent Nijman; Email: vnijman@brookes.ac.uk
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Summary

Poisonous birds are rare but on New Guinea, including Indonesia’s easternmost provinces, no less than nine poisonous species, eight pitohuis and one species of ifrita, are found. Pitohuis when handled can cause sneezing with numbness and burning of nasal tissue and nausea in humans. In the bird markets of western Indonesia novelty birds are traded at a premium and overexploitation of popular songbirds leads traders to find replacement species to meet demand. We conducted over 800 surveys in the bird markets of Sumatra, Java, Bali, Lombok, and Sulawesi between 1994 and 2023 and from 2015 onwards we assessed the online trade in pitohuis and Blue-capped Ifrit Ifrita kowaldi. We identified the species, recorded their prices and location, and the date when the birds were offered for sale. We analysed temporal trends, volumes, prices, and geographical origin of the sellers. Between 1994 and 2014 we did not encounter a single pitohui in the Indonesian bird markets. In the following years we recorded 113 pitohuis in 12 bird markets and we recorded 199 pitohuis for sale online; 248 were variable pitohuis and 54 were Hooded Pitohui Pitohui dichrous. No ifritas were recorded. Most pitohuis were recorded in eastern Java and Bali. Prices differed between eastern Java (mean of US$93) and western Java and Bali (US$185), possibly suggesting pitohuis arrive from West Papua in eastern Java and from there make their way to the outer markets. Pitohuis are marketed as “Papuan Straw-headed Bulbuls”; the Straw-headed Bulbul Pycnonotus zeylanicus is a very popular and expensive songbird from Southeast Asia, including western Indonesia, that has become rare both in the wild and in the markets due to overexploitation. Discussions about pitohuis on online forums rarely mention “poisonous” but when it is mentioned traders dismiss this as something not to worry about and they claim it to be dietary-dependent. Poisonous pitohuis are novelty, as well as master, birds in Indonesia, where they are marketed for their song ignoring any negative side-effects of them being poisonous. The trade in novelty species, when detected early, does allow for the authorities to intervene in a timely manner to ensure that this trade does not impede their conservation.

Ringkasan

Ringkasan

Burung Beracun sebagai Hewan Peliharaan. Burung beracun sangat jarang ditemukan, tetapi di Papua Nugini, termasuk provinsi-provinsi paling timur Indonesia, terdapat tidak kurang dari sembilan spesies burung beracun, delapan di antaranya adalah pitohui dan satu spesies ifrita. Pitohui dapat menyebabkan bersin, mati rasa, dan rasa terbakar pada jaringan hidung serta mual pada manusia jika disentuh. Di pasar burung di Indonesia bagian barat, burung-burung unik dijual dengan harga tinggi. Eksploitasi berlebihan terhadap burung kicau populer juga mendorong pedagang untuk mencari spesies pengganti untuk memenuhi permintaan. Kami melakukan lebih dari 800 survei di pasar burung di Sumatra, Jawa, Bali, Lombok, dan Sulawesi antara tahun 1994 dan 2023, dan sejak tahun 2015, kami meninjau perdagangan online pitohui dan Ifrita. Kami mengidentifikasi spesies, mencatat harga dan lokasi, serta tanggal ketika burung-burung tersebut ditawarkan untuk dijual. Kami menganalisis tren temporal, volume, harga, dan asal geografis para penjual. Antara tahun 1994 dan 2014, kami tidak menemukan satu pun pitohui di pasar burung Indonesia. Kami mencatat 113 pitohui di 12 pasar burung dan 199 pitohui yang dijual secara online; 248 di antaranya adalah pitohui belang dan 54 adalah pitohui topi-hitam. Tidak ada ifrita yang tercatat. Sebagian besar pitohui tercatat di Jawa Timur dan Bali. Harga berbeda antara Jawa Timur (rata-rata Rp 1,4 juta) dan Jawa Barat serta Bali (Rp 2,9 juta), yang mungkin menunjukkan bahwa pitohui tiba dari Papua Barat di Jawa Timur dan dari sana menyebar ke pasar-pasar lain. Pitohui dipasarkan sebagai ‘cucak rawa Papua’; cucak rawa adalah burung pekicau yang sangat populer dan mahal dari Asia Tenggara, termasuk Indonesia bagian barat, yang menjadi langka baik di alam liar maupun di pasar karena eksploitasi berlebihan. Diskusi tentang pitohui di forum-forum online jarang menyebutkan ‘beracun’, tetapi ketika disebutkan, para pedagang menganggapnya sebagai sesuatu yang tidak perlu dikhawatirkan dan mereka mengklaim hal ini bergantung pada pola makan. Pitohui beracun adalah burung unik di Indonesia, yang dipasarkan untuk suaranya tanpa memperhatikan efek samping negatif dari racunnya. Perdagangan spesies unik, jika terdeteksi lebih awal, memungkinkan pihak berwenang untuk segera melakukan intervensi guna memastikan perdagangan ini tidak menghambat upaya konservasi mereka.

Information

Type
Short Communication
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BY
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution and reproduction, provided the original article is properly cited.
Copyright
© The Author(s), 2024. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of BirdLife International
Figure 0

Table 1. Poisonous pitohuis and ifrits, endemic to the island of New Guinea, and their status and distribution in Indonesia. LC = Least Concern

Figure 1

Figure 1. From top left, clockwise: Hooded Pitohui Pitohui dichrous, offered for sale by a seller in Jakarta (December 2023; asking price US$72); variable pitohui, offered for sale by seller in Bekasi, West Java (October 2023); Northern Variable Pitohui Pitohui kirhocephalus for sale at Satria bird market in Denpasar, Bali (January 2020), Northern Variable Pitohui (lacking tail) offered for sale online for US$66 (first posted February 2018), with the seller based in Sidoarjo, near Surabaya in East Java; Northern Variable Pitohui, Jakarta (first posted March 2017), with an asking price of US$346. (Photographs: Vincent Nijman, Jessica Chavez, S. Sunny Nelson, and Ahmad Ardiansyah)

Figure 2

Figure 2. Changes in the trade in pitohuis in western Indonesia over time. The continuous line represents a minimum estimate of the cumulative number of birds that were offered for sale online and in bird markets.

Figure 3

Table 2. Trade in pitohuis in Java and Bali, with the numbers of birds observed in bird markets and on online platforms during 2015–2023. All prices (mean ± SD) were collected in Indonesian rupiah and converted to US dollars using a conversion rate of Rp 13,600 per 1 US$