‘Loved to death’: poaching for the horticultural market threatens cycads in South Africa.
The Kirstenbosch National Botanical Garden, in Cape Town, South Africa, is globally famous for its displays of indigenous vegetation. One section of the garden is given over to cycads, a group of plants so ancient that dinosaurs once roamed among them. Cycads are greatly prized by collectors, and rare specimens can sell for tens of thousands of dollars. This is why the most valuable cycad in Kirstenbosch is now secured inside a cage – to prevent poachers from digging it up.1
This is not an imagined threat. Over two rainy nights in August 2014, poachers made off with 24 Encephalartos latifrons cycads from the gardens, collectively worth more than US$65 000.2 That particular species of cycad is critically endangered, with fewer than 100 surviving plants in the wild. The incident received international attention,3 yet dozens like it take place each year. The illicit cycad trade in South Africa has grown so organized, lucrative and harmful that the authorities have identified it as a priority wildlife crime, alongside rhino, elephant and abalone poaching.4
Photo: Daniel Stiles
Home of rare cycads – and cycad poaching
South Africa is a hotspot of cycad diversity, hosting 38 species, or around a tenth of the world’s total. Of these species, 29 are endemic, found nowhere else on earth. Already, three of South Africa’s cycads are extinct in the wild, and half of the remaining species are at risk of extinction in the near future, according to scientists.5 In 2005, poachers dug up the last 11 survivors of one species on a mountain where, less than three decades earlier, more than 200 of the plants had been counted.6
The costs are especially pronounced given the global conservation status of cycads, which have been des-cribed by the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) as the most threatened plant group in the world.7 Cycads flourished during the Jurassic period and were previously found around the world. Now, the spiny plants only occur in southern Africa, central America, South East Asia and Australasia. Individual plants can live 1 000 years or more because they continue to produce new offshoots at the base of the trunk.
IPBES Global assessment report on biodiversity and ecosystem services.
The biggest threat to cycads in South Africa comes from people obsessed with owning them; as one recent magazine feature put it, cycads ‘are being loved to death’.8 Cycads are considered status symbols by wealthy collectors in South Africa and internationally: as one participant said to researchers studying the trade in South Africa, ‘owning a rare cycad displays wealth and intelligence in a way owning luxury cars does not’.9
But the plants grow extremely slowly – around a centimetre per year – and take decades to reach maturity. Lacking patience, many collectors prefer to buy fully grown cycads, driving the illicit market. This illicit trade has operated for decades in South Africa, but may have intensified in recent years as the plants become rarer in the wild, and thus more coveted. Of more than 630 cycads confiscated by police in the Eastern Cape between 2011 and 2016, every single one was on the IUCN Red List, demonstrating a clear market preference for threatened species.10
Cycads are also harvested illegally in South Africa for producing traditional medicine, or muti. Researchers estimate that several tonnes of cycad bark are sold annually.11 People who trade illegally in live cycads have justified doing so by arguing that, if left in the wild, the plants would be harvested for medicine (or fall foul of ground clearance for development or agriculture). Yet the medicinal market is far smaller and less damaging to cycad populations than the horticultural trade.
Since the 1970s, it has been prohibited to harvest, trade or possess wild cycads in South Africa, but a legal market still exists for cultivated plants. This provides cover for traffickers and enables the laundering of poached cycads.12 Conservationists recently estimated that, in the South African city of Pretoria alone, there were as many as 36 000 households with cycads – many times more than officials have capacity to inspect. (This is compounded by the widespread securitization of wealthier houses in South Africa, with many located within gated communities, making access even more difficult for inspectors.)13 ‘Many homes could have cycads purchased from traffickers and no one would know,’ says John Donaldson, a cycad expert who formerly worked for the South African National Biodiversity Institute.14 Conservationists have reported visiting homes with ostensibly cultivated cycads that bore unmistakable traces of wild origins, such as burn marks from fires and bites from porcupines.15
There are also international protections for South African cycads, but these, too, can be circumvented. All of South Africa’s cycad species are listed on the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species (CITES) Appendix I, which means, in theory, that plants obtained from the wild may not be exported. Yet informants in the horticultural industry say that traders continue to export cycads illegally, for example by misdeclaring the plants as palm trees, which superficially resemble cycads and are not protected under CITES.16 In a 2001 sting operation, dubbed ‘Operation Botany,’ US authorities arrested six men for a scheme to traffic wild cycads worth an estimated US$1.3 million from South Africa. The available evidence, however, points to South Africa’s domestic cycad market as a bigger threat than international trafficking.17
The Eastern Cape–Gauteng connection
A major centre of South Africa’s cycad poaching crisis is the Eastern Cape province, home to 14 native cycad species. Research by a retired high-ranking police official indicates that, between 2011 and 2018, close to 1 000 cycads were uprooted in 27 separate poaching incidents, with an estimated value of US$1.2 million.18 Police in the small town of Jansenville alone (population 5 600) recorded more than 350 stolen cycads. And these are only poaching incidents that have been reported to the police.
Several cycad poachers have been arrested on multiple occasions, including a local farm owner. This suggests that cycad poaching is a specialized market, requiring specialist knowledge of which species are valuable, as well as access to buyers. The majority of offenders have residential addresses in and vehicle registration numbers from Gauteng, South Africa’s wealthiest and most populous province, supporting a conclusion that poached cycads are being transported across the country before being sold.
Brigadier General Andre Krause, the retired police official, said in an interview that ‘rich collectors’ in Gauteng were behind the illicit trade. Interviews with incarcerated poachers by TRAFFIC, the wildlife-trade monitoring organization, reveal a similar connection. One poacher described how poached cycads were ‘simply covered with plastic sheeting’ and driven from the Eastern Cape to Gauteng.19 Research for this risk bulletin found that cycad prices are typically higher at nurseries in Gauteng than elsewhere in South Africa.20
Cycads are typically priced per centimetre, with rarer species considered more valuable; other factors that influence the cost of cycads include age and signs of damage. In general, poached cycads retail for around a quarter of the legal price, according to informants. This is because the plants are usually in poor condition after being crudely dug out using crowbars and pangas, and then transported without adequate care or maintenance. This provides buyers with opportunities to obtain cycads cheaply, and is also said to provide incentives for corrupt nurseries to buy poached plants and launder them into licit markets.21
South African Police Service
Very little of this money reaches the people responsible for harvesting the plants. Some poachers have reported being hired on false pretences – ‘to cut down trees,’ as one incarcerated poacher told TRAFFIC – and earning little more than US$40 per job. More experienced poachers report higher earnings, and some go on to become so-called ‘recruiters,’ hiring other people to chop down cycads.22 It appears that the trade operates via kinship networks, with police data from the Eastern Cape showing that a large number of arrested poachers are Zimbabwean nationals.23
A robust illicit trade
The COVID-19 pandemic, which restricted passenger flights and interprovincial travel for more than six months in 2020, appears not to have had a major effect on the illicit cycad trade. Informants reported that there were no significant changes in cycad prices. Two cases of cycad theft from private residences were reported in the Eastern Cape during lockdown, while authorities in the neighbouring Western Cape noted a brief decline in cycad poaching, followed by a rapid escalation, with cycads worth approximately US$1 million stolen in just six months of 2021.24
Various attempts have been made to deter cycad poaching, including implanting microchips and a technique known as micro-dotting, or spraying the plants with miniscule dots, each of which has a scannable reference code unique to each plant. But both methods are time-consuming, requiring individual plants to be tagged in the wild, and poachers have developed workarounds, such as x-raying plants and digging out the microchips. Researchers from the University of Cape Town have now developed a promising technique for identifying wild cycads using radiocarbon dating and stable isotopes, which act as hyper-local signatures of the landscape where individual cycads grew.25 These signatures are intrinsic to each plant and cannot be removed. The primary application of this method, however, is in detecting cycads that have already been poached, not preventing poaching in the first place.26
For now, the surest method of keeping wild cycads in the ground appears to be physically enclosing them, an option available mainly to private landowners. Currently, on a wine farm in the Western Cape, engineers are discussing how to secure an exhibit of valuable cycads, due to fears they may be stolen. For the shrinking number of wild cycads in South Africa, though, there is no such protection.
SANParks
Notes
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Jonas Torgersen, Crime, Culture and Collecting: The Illicit Cycad Market in South Africa, MPhil thesis, University of Cape Town, South Africa, 2017. ↩
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Rarer than rhino and just as prized by poachers, University of Cape Town News, 24 September 2014, https://www.news.uct.ac.za/article/-2014-09-29-rarer-than-rhino-and-just-as-prized-by-poachers. ↩
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South Africa’s ancient cycad plants under threat from poachers, The Guardian, 1 September 2014, https://www.theguardian.com/world/2014/sep/01/ancient-cycad-plants-under-threat-poachers. ↩
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Strategic objectives of the National Integrated Strategy to Combat Wildlife Trafficking, South Africa, https://static.pmg.org.za/170530NISCWT.pdf. ↩
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Rarer than rhino and just as prized by poachers, University of Cape Town News, 24 September 2014, https://www.news.uct.ac.za/article/-2014-09-29-rarer-than-rhino-and-just-as-prized-by-poachers. ↩
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News24, Hot on cycad thieves’ heels, 14 July 2005, https://www.news24.com/news24/hot-on-cycad-thieves-heels-20050714. ↩
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IUCN/SSC Cycad Specialist Group, Cycads. Status Survey and Conservation Action Plan., ed John Donaldson. Gland, Switzerland: International Union for Conservation of Nature, 2003. ↩
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Are you living next door to a poacher?, Africa Geographic, 2 November 2020, https://africageographic.com/stories/cycads-are-you-living-next-door-to-a-poacher/. ↩
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Jonas Torgersen, Crime, Culture and Collecting: The Illicit Cycad Market in South Africa, MPhil thesis, University of Cape Town, South Africa, 2017. ↩
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Ibid. ↩
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Vivienne Williams et al., From fragments to figures: estimating the number of Encephalartos stems in a muthi market, South African Journal of Botany, 93, 242–246; Steven Cousins et al., Quantifying the trade in cycads (Encephalartos species) in the traditional medicine markets of Johannesburg and Durban, South Africa, Economic Botany, 65, 356–370. ↩
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Interview with Stephen Trollip, cycad nursery owner in Limpopo Province, October 2020. ↩
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Jonas Torgersen, Crime, Culture and Collecting: The Illicit Cycad Market in South Africa, MPhil thesis, University of Cape Town, South Africa, 2017. ↩
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Interview with John Donaldson, former South African National Biodiversity Institute cycad expert, November 2020. ↩
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Rarer than rhino and just as prized by poachers, University of Cape Town News, 24 September 2014, https://www.news.uct.ac.za/article/-2014-09-29-rarer-than-rhino-and-just-as-prized-by-poachers. ↩
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Interview with cycad nursery owner in Port Elizabeth, November 2020. ↩
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Jonas Torgersen, Crime, Culture and Collecting: The Illicit Cycad Market in South Africa, MPhil thesis, University of Cape Town, South Africa, 2017. ↩
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An independent study carried out by retired police Brigadier General Andre Krause. List of cases investigated by Eastern Cape Department of Economic Development, Environmental Affairs and Tourism (DEDEAT) and limited to cycads illegally uprooted and stolen from nature/farms/parks (theft of cycads from private residences excluded). ↩
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Sadé Moneron et al., Insights from the incarcerated: an assessment of the illicit supply chain in wildlife in South Africa, TRAFFIC, 2021, https://www.traffic.org/publications/reports/insights-from-the-incarcerated/. ↩
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The 2020 data were from three classified ad websites, two nursery websites, one auction price list (which made up the majority of the data points) and Facebook data from several open cycad groups. ↩
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Interview with Stephen Trollip, cycad nursery owner in Limpopo Province, October 2020. ↩
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Sadé Moneron et al., Insights from the incarcerated: an assessment of the illicit supply chain in wildlife in South Africa, TRAFFIC, 2021, https://www.traffic.org/publications/reports/insights-from-the-incarcerated/. ↩
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An independent study carried out by retired police Brigadier General Andre Krause. ↩
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Syndicates launch new poaching offensive, targeting SA’s succulents, says Cape Nature, News24, 14 July 2021, https://www.news24.com/news24/southafrica/news/syndicates-launch-new-poaching-offensive-targeting-sas-succulents-says-cape-nature-20210714. ↩
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Rarer than rhino and just as prized by poachers, University of Cape Town News, 24 September 2014, https://www.news.uct.ac.za/article/-2014-09-29-rarer-than-rhino-and-just-as-prized-by-poachers. ↩
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Kirsten Retief et al., Can stable isotopes and radiocarbon dating provide a forensic solution for curbing illegal harvesting of threatened cycads?, Journal of Forensic Sciences, 56, 5, 1 541. ↩