The African cherry yuniz |
DOWNLOAD REPORT Image source/credit: Traffic/Twitter |
Herbal
remedies, food, drink, cosmetics and even furniture can come from wild
harvested plants, but industry and consumers are paying “far too little
attention” about whether they are being traded responsibly, campaigners said.
A
report highlighting the issue by wildlife trade monitoring network Traffic says
that of the 30,000 plant species with documented medicinal or aromatic uses,
around 3,000 are found in international trade.
An
estimated 60% to 90% of plants traded globally are harvested from the wild,
often with little consideration given to ensure sustainable supplies, Traffic
warned.
The
global trade in medicinal plants alone has grown threefold since 1999 to be
worth £2.3 billion in 2015, although that is likely to be an underestimate.
But
only 7% of the world’s plants which have medicinal or aromatic properties have
been assessed to see if they are at risk of extinction, and a fifth of those
that have are under threat, the report said.
Harvesting
too much of a plant and damaging processes such as using heavy machinery to
collect wild liquorice root are significant reasons for wild plant species
being in decline, the report warned.
But
sustainable harvesting and trade could help manage habitats well for other
wildlife and provide incomes to local people.
Anastasiya
Timoshyna, from Traffic – who co-authored the report, said: “Millions of people
rely on wild plant collection both for their healthcare and for their
livelihoods, from rural rosehip harvesters in Serbia to baobab fruit collectors
in Zimbabwe and the wide benefits of this harvesting are reaped by consumers
across the world.
“But
the industry utilising wild plant ingredients and consumers are paying far too
little attention to ensuring plants are being traded responsibly.
“It’s
in everyone’s interests to ensure that their use of wild plants is responsible
in terms of ecological and social sustainability, so we all need to learn about
the origin of the products we are using.”
Consumers
are being urged to look out for the FairWild logo, which ensures sustainable
harvesting and trade in wild plants, and ask the brands they buy if the plant
products in them have been sourced fairly and sustainably.
“Companies
often market their products as being ‘naturally sourced’ or ‘wild’ with little
interpretation of what that actually entails: it’s time for consumer pressure
to ensure it really means they have been sustainably or ethically traded – if
in doubt look for the FairWild logo on the packaging or ask why it doesn’t
appear,” she said.
The
report is being published to mark FairWild week which aims to support efforts
to make sure wild plants are sustainably sourced.
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