全部 标题 作者
关键词 摘要

OALib Journal期刊
ISSN: 2333-9721
费用:99美元

查看量下载量

相关文章

更多...
PLOS ONE  2011 

A Stated Preference Investigation into the Chinese Demand for Farmed vs. Wild Bear Bile

DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0021243

Full-Text   Cite this paper   Add to My Lib

Abstract:

Farming of animals and plants has recently been considered not merely as a more efficient and plentiful supply of their products but also as a means of protecting wild populations from that trade. Amongst these nascent farming products might be listed bear bile. Bear bile has been exploited by traditional Chinese medicinalists for millennia. Since the 1980s consumers have had the options of: illegal wild gall bladders, bile extracted from caged live bears or the acid synthesised chemically. Despite these alternatives bears continue to be harvested from the wild. In this paper we use stated preference techniques using a random sample of the Chinese population to estimate demand functions for wild bear bile with and without competition from farmed bear bile. We find a willingness to pay considerably more for wild bear bile than farmed. Wild bear bile has low own price elasticity and cross price elasticity with farmed bear bile. The ability of farmed bear bile to reduce demand for wild bear bile is at best limited and, at prevailing prices, may be close to zero or have the opposite effect. The demand functions estimated suggest that the own price elasticity of wild bear bile is lower when competing with farmed bear bile than when it is the only option available. This means that the incumbent product may actually sell more items at a higher price when competing than when alone in the market. This finding may be of broader interest to behavioural economists as we argue that one explanation may be that as product choice increases price has less impact on decision making. For the wildlife farming debate this indicates that at some prices the introduction of farmed competition might increase the demand for the wild product.

References

[1]  Nowell K (2000) Far from a Cure: the Tiger Trade Revisited. Cambridge: Traffic.
[2]  Hutchings JA (2000) Collapse and recovery of marine fishes. Nature 406: 882–885.
[3]  Hutton J, Webb G (2003) Crocodiles: legal trade snaps back. In: Oldfield S, editor. The trade in wildlife: Regulation for conservation. London, UK: Earthscan.
[4]  Group ICS (2006) CSG Steering Committee Meeting. Montelimar.
[5]  Dutton A, Hepburn C, Macdonald DW (in press) Finding the Least Leaky Bucket: Farming Wildlife and Wildlife Trade Regulation. In: Macdonald DW, Willis K, editors. Key Topics in Conservation 2. Chichester: Wiley Blackwell.
[6]  Huang J Asian Perspectives on the therapeutic value of bear bile and alternatives; 1994; Washington D.C., USA.
[7]  Bensky D, Clavey S, Stoger E (2004) Materia Medica: Chinese Herbal Medicine. Eastland Press.
[8]  Lee Y The use of bear bile as medicine versus tonic. In: Williamson DF, Phipps MJ, editors. 1999; National Insititute of Environmental Research, Seoul, Republic of Korea.
[9]  Anonymous (2005) Finding herbal Alternatives to bear bile. London: WSPA.
[10]  Mills JA Asian dedication to the use of bear bile as medicine. In: Rose DA, Gask AL, editors. 1994; University of Washington, Seattle, Washington USA.
[11]  Shoda M (1927) über die ursodesoxychols?ure aus b?rengallen und ihre physiologische wirkung. J Biochem 7: 505–510.
[12]  Kanazawa T, Shimazake A, Sato T, Hoshino T (1954) Synthesis of ursodeoxycholic acid and its conjugated bile acid. Proc Jpn Acad 30: 391–394.
[13]  Roda E, Azzaroli F, Nigro G, Piazza F, Jaboli F, et al. (2002) Improved liver tests and greater biliary enrichment with high dose ursodeoxycholic acid in early stage primary biliary cirrhosis. Digestive and Liver Disease 34: 523–527.
[14]  Ikegami T, Matsuzaki Y, Shoda J, Kano M, Hirabayashi N, et al. (1998) The chemopreventive role of ursodeoxycholic acid in azoxymethane-treated rats: suppressive effects on enhanced group II phospholipase A2 expression in colonic tissue. Cancer Letters 134: 129–139.
[15]  Barclay L (2003) Ursodeoxycholic Acid Prevents Gallstones After Gastric Restrictive Procedures? Ann Surg 238: 697–702.
[16]  Hagey LR, Crombie DL, Espinosa E, Carey MC, Igimi H, et al. (1993) Ursodeoxycholic acid in the Ursidae. Biliary bile acids of bears, pandas and related carnivores. Journal of Lipid Research 34: 1911–1917.
[17]  Servheen C (1994) The Impacts of the bear trade on global bear populations,. Proc of the International Symposium on the Trade of Bear Parts for Medicinal Use. Washington, USA.
[18]  Peppin L, McEwing R, Carvalho GR, Ogden R (2008) A DNA-Based Approach for the Forensic Identification of Asiatic Black Bear (Ursus thibetanus) in a Traditional Asian Medicine*. Journal of Forensic Sciences 53: 1358–1362.
[19]  IUCN Red List of Threatened Species.
[20]  Garshelis DL, Steinmetz R (2007) Ursus thibetanus, Asiatic Black Bear. IUCN.
[21]  WSPA (2002) The bear bile business;. In: Phillips T, Wilson P, editors. London: WSPA.
[22]  WSPA (2010) Inside Bear Farms. London.
[23]  Mainka SA, Mills J (1995) Wildlife and Traditional Chinese Medicine: Supply and Demand for Wildlife Species. Journal of Zoo and Wildlife Medicine 26: 193–200.
[24]  Raloff J (2005) A Galling Business. Science News 168: 250–252.
[25]  Loeffler IK, Robinson J, Cochrane G (2009) Compromised health and welfare of bears farmed for bile in China. Animal Welfare 18: 225–235.
[26]  Servheen C, Herrero H, Peyton B (1999) Bears: Status Survey and Conservation Action Plan. Gland, Switzerland: IUCN.
[27]  Bateman IJ, Carson RT, Day B, Hanemann M, Hanley N, et al. (2002) Economic valuation with stated preference techniques: A manual: Edward Elgar Publishing, Cheltenham, Gloucestershire.
[28]  Press CS (2007) China Statistical Yearbook: University of Michigan Center for Chinese Studies.
[29]  Kish L (1949) A Procedure for Objective Respondent Selection within the Household. Journal of the American Statistical Association 44: 380–387.
[30]  Gratwicke B, Mills J, Dutton A, Gabriel G, Long B, et al. (2008) Attitudes Toward Consumption and Conservation of Tigers in China. PLoS ONE 3: e2544.
[31]  Blamey RK, Bennett JW, Louviere JJ, Morrison MD, Rolfe J (2000) A test of policy labels in environmental choice modelling studies. Ecological Economics 32: 269–286.
[32]  De Bekker-Grob EW, Hol L, Donkers B, Van Dam L, Habbema JDF, et al. (2010) Labeled versus Unlabeled Discrete Choice Experiments in Health Economics: An Application to Colorectal Cancer Screening. Value in Health 13: 315–323.
[33]  Tversky A, Kahneman D (1974) Judgment under Uncertainty: Heuristics and Biases. Science 185: 1124–1131.
[34]  eTranslate (2006) Shop Survey in China. London: WSPA.
[35]  Bekoff M (2009) Bear Tapping: a bile business. New Scientist. London: Reed Business Information.
[36]  AHAN Bear bile farm visit.
[37]  Mills JS, C. pp. 161–167. The Asian trade in bears and bear parts: Impacts and conservation recomendations; 1994; Missoula, Montana, USA.
[38]  Wyler LS, Sheikh PA (2009) International illegal wildlife trade: Threats and US policy. Washington, D.C., USA: Congressional Research Service.
[39]  Neale D (2010) Dutton A, editor.
[40]  Howitt P (1987) Money Illusion. pp. 518–519. The New Palgrave: A Dictionary of Economics. 3 ed: Macmillan.
[41]  Tanaka MM, Kendal JR, Laland KN (2009) From Traditional Medicine to Witchcraft: Why Medical Treatments Are Not Always Efficacious. PLoS ONE 4:
[42]  Mishan EJ (1971) Evaluation of Life and Limb: A Theoretical Approach. The Journal of Political Economy 79: 687–705.

Full-Text

Contact Us

service@oalib.com

QQ:3279437679

WhatsApp +8615387084133