November 15, 2017D

ear Mr. Sheehan,

I am deeply dismayed by the news today that your department has reversed a ban on the import of ivory and other elephant trophies in the United States from Zimbabwe and Zambia.

Americans are deeply opposed to this ban reversal, and their case is much better supported than the case put together by the Department of Fish and Wildlife Service.

In fact, 98% of all U.S. citizens oppose laws which support the import of ivory into the United States.

As acting secretary of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, I urge you to resist and reverse this indefensible action by this administration.

Here are the reasons:

The Way we Protect Iconic Species Matters

Animal rights are as old as civilization, and these moral laws against cruelty toward animals is especially strong among Americans. We spend $11 billion a year in animal rights charities, and according to a recent Gallup poll, only 3 percent of Americans say that animals don’t need much protection.

But Americans draw a moral line in the sand with large, sentient mammals. We agree that killing great apes, cetaceans and large iconic keystone mammals like elephants and rhinos is indefensible from a moral standpoint.

While your department has argued that the sport killing of elephants will help conservation efforts, this argument ignores the fact that Americans find the sport killing of these intelligent, sentient animals morally repugnant.

Here is an analogy. If the Trump Administration argued that the sport killing of Blue Whales or Chimpanzees would help promote their conservation, would we support laws that promoted thos killings?

Of course not, for one because there are better alternatives to their conservation, and second because we have strong moral convictions about the killing of these sentient mammals that forbids us from making the case for their killing.

This leads to a very important point. If all the Polar Bears, Hyacinth Macaws, tigers, pandas and elephants died tomorrow, the world would go on, although it would be a diminished one.

But we live in a world where we are actually fighting to protect the very biodiversity that keeps our world and atmosphere functioning in a way that can support our biosphere and our global economies. We are in a fight for the survival of our coccolithophores, the foraminifera, the tiny crustaceans and molluscs, the fabric of biodiversity upon which civilization rests.

In this world threatened by complex issues like ocean acidification and climate change, the way we protect our elephants, tigers, pandas, macaws and polar bears matters, a lot. The finite set of species which inhabit our idea of nature and help inspire people to conserve are important particularly in this way. They are what turns our children into environmentalists and make people more interested in the bigger ecological issues we face.

The notion that triumphing Don Trump. Jr. greedily and luridly holding the bloody tail of an elephant which he just killed with a semi-automatic weapon from the comfort of a helicopter or a Land Rover is not the image we should present to a world as the face of conservation. The conservation of iconic keystone species like elephants is the public face of conservation at large. The American face of conservation should resemble Jane Goodall, not cowardly Walter Palmer.

All Genuine Conservation Involves Locals

The idea of tying a game exclusive only to the foreign ultra-wealthy, and presenting that to Africans as a solution to conservation is troublesome. In mainstream, modern conservation efforts around the world, incorporating the local community is central to successful conservation. Americans can support international conservation efforts on other continents, but we do not dictate them to others.

Trophy hunting takes the local community out of the solution almost entirely, as the trophy hunting industry employs almost no locals. In fact, proponents of trophy hunting argue that trophy hunting fees go to help the local community and the conservation of the elephants themselves. But this is actually not happening in countries that allow trophy hunting of elephants. The money that is supposed to go into the local community ends up being siphoned off to bureaucrats and safari clubs.

In many cases, investigations have revealed that the intended beneficiaries of trophy hunting fees never get a penny of the proceeds. This helps explain why elephant populations are declining.

Elephant Populations are Declining in Countries that Support Elephant Hunting

Across Africa, elephant populations have been plummeting in the last 10 years alone. On average, across Africa, the elephant populations are declining by 8% each year. This is partially due to habitat loss, but primarily due to hunting. The reason? The demand for ivory by wealthy foreigners. Even though 98% of all Americans are against the import of ivory into the United States, ultra-wealthy Chinese and ultra-wealthy Americans together form the bulk of the ivory marketplace. As the supply of ivory declines, the value increases. Those who collect and trade ivory understand that as global supplies dwindle, the value of their collection skyrockets.

It is the very people who this law was designed for - ultra-wealthy trophy hunters and ivory collectors - who are the primary cause of elephant declines in the first place.

Laws which Encourage the Trade of Ivory are Indefensible

Because the ivory trade is the primary reason for the rapid decline of elephants throughout Africa, promoting legislation which expands or supports that trade directly contributes to the decline of elephants.

The international trade of ivory was banned in 1989, and that ban was a high point in conservation of elephants, as it helped to shut down global ivory markets and created the hugely successful global perception that owning ivory was illicit and immoral.

Laws which champion the trade of ivory directly subvert the authority of international bans on ivory.

The Claim that Hunting Elephants is an Important Conservation Tactic is False

According to a November 16, 2017 article in the Washington Post:

"...The hunting of elephants brings in very little revenue. A 2017 report by Economists at Large, an economic analysis firm based in Australia, found that in eight African countries, trophy hunting amounted to less than 1 percent of total tourism revenue and 0.03 percent of the countries' total gross national product. A 2015 National Geographic report found that only minimal amounts of revenue from game hunting actually trickled down to the communities managing elephant populations. Government corruption is a big factor in this, with authorities keeping hunting fees for themselves and seizing wildlife lands to profit from hunting and poaching."

The Washington Post then went on to cite data from your own department, showing the positive effects of banning trophies.