Global Fashion Threatens Rare Tibetan Antelope
by Justin Lowe
Tibetan Plateau Project
The high grasslands of the Tibetan Plateau, known as the Chang Tang,
appear to stretch limitlessly in every direction, devoid of fences, bounded
only by snowcapped mountains and a turquoise sky. In springtime, herds of
Tibetan antelope that may total 8,000 sweep across this wide-open expanse
in their annual migration to birthing grounds in the north.
It’s an impressive sight, until you consider that less than a century ago tens
of thousands of antelope could be observed in a single herd. Tibetan Plateau
antelope populations are rapidly declining, reduced by poaching for meat
and hides. Ironically, the endangered antelope face their greatest threat not
from subsistence hunting, but from international demand for “shatoosh,”
their highly-prized wool.
Shatoosh (aka “shahtush”) shawls and scarves are considered the finest
and warmest in the world – selling for more than $2000 each in India and
up to $10,000 or more in the US and Europe. Demand for shatoosh has risen
alarmingly since the 1980s, when shatoosh became more popular in Asia
and an increasingly favored fashion item in Europe, the US and Australia.
The Chang Tang (“northern plain” in Tibetan), a high-altitude steppe
averaging 16,000 feet in elevation, dominates the northern region of the
Tibetan Plateau, covers more than 200,000 sq. mi. (an area larger than
Germany or California). Tibetan antelope (Pantholops hodgsoni) share the
Chang Tang with wild yak and argali sheep, as well as large predators such
as snow leopards, Tibetan brown bears and wolves.
The antelope is endemic to the Tibetan Plateau regions of India and China.
Males average four feet tall and 80 pounds, with sharp, tapering horns
nearly two feet long and distinctive black markings on their otherwise
grayish coats. Females are smaller and hornless, with tawny coloration.
Despite designation of the 115,500 sq. mi. Chang Tang Reserve in 1993
(the world’s second-largest protected area), these antelope (called “chiru” in
Tibetan) face a devastating threat from poachers. In addition to local
Tibetans and Chinese people involved in the illegal hunting and trade, a
growing number of outsiders have started to come to the region specifically
to shoot chiru. Local officials estimate that a t least 2000 -4000 animals are
poached annually in the Chang Tang. Wildlife agencies are too understaffed
to prevent the illegal hunting.
“With chiru wool now a lucrative commodity, the animals are being
relentlessly hunted,” said George Schaller, the Wildlife Conservation
Society’s director for science. Schaller, who has studied Tibetan Plateau
wildlife for more than a decade, estimates the remaining antelope number
only 75,000, with “all populations no doubt in decline.” He attributes the
loss principally to poaching.
Schaller believes that while subsistence hunting in the reserve did not pose
a threat to wildlife in the past, commercial exploitation clearly imperils the
survival of the species. “Chiru cannot long endure such unrestrained killing.
If present trends continue, the species will survive as mere scattered
remnants.”
An investigation published last year by the Wildlife Protection Society of
India (WPSI), Fashioned for Extinction. revealed the intricacies of the
shatoosh trade. After the wool is shorn from the hides of slaughtered
antelope, it is smuggled by mule, yak or truck from Tibet into India and
Nepal. The shatoosh is destined for Srinagar, in the Indian state of Jammu
and Kashmir, where for more than centuries, local weavers have
produced shatoosh products.
In India, shawls sell for as much as $5000, but they can bring even more
internationally – sometimes selling for as much as $10,000-30,000. While
the total output of the industry is unknown, it clearly contributes to the
deaths of thousands of chiru annually.
The Tibetan antelope is on the IUCN Red List of Threatened Animals and
protected under CITES, a treaty that prohibits international commercial
trade in endangered species. The chiru also receives nominal protection
under the national wildlife laws of China, Nepal and India – with one
exception. In Jammu and Kashmir, the state government has amended its
wildlife laws to allow trade in antelope products.
Shatoosh items are now available worldwide. Police have confiscated
shawls and scarves in the US, Canada, Italy, the UK and France, as well as
in major Indian cities, Nepal, Japan, China and Hong Kong. Despite these
seizures, few violators have been successfully prosecuted under national or
international laws. In May, police in New Delhi working with WPSI on a
sting operation seized 46 shatoosh shawls worth almost $250,000.
Interdiction of shatoosh imports to the US has been hampered because the
antelope is not listed as an endangered species. The US Fish and Wildlife
Service requires a complicated and lengthy “petition” process before the
species can receive protection. While the antelope is protected by CITES,
the USFWS claims that the burden of proof necessary for successful
prosecution of violators is difficult to meet.
Alternatives to shatoosh certainly exist – fine cashmere and pashmina
wool is almost as high-quality as shatoosh, and manufacturers are working
on a new product to meet the demanding standards of the high-fashion industry.
With the arrival of the Fall fashion season, shatoosh sales will
undoubtedly increase. Since import controls will continue to be inadequate
until the chiru officially becomes an endangered species, consumer
vigilance will be the strongest disincentive. With this in mind, the Tibetan
Plateau Project (TPP) has begun a campaign to educate the public and
retailers about the adverse impacts of the antelope trade.
TPP is working with other conservation organizations to submit a petition
to the USFWS to list the Tibetan antelope, a process that could take up to a
year or more. In the meantime, research on the shatoosh trade will continue,
along with efforts to coordinate TPP’s work with conservation organizations
and authorities in India, Tibet and Nepal.
What You Can Do: Contact TPP to receive an expanded version of this
article and an “Antelope Action Pak” of informational materials and
resources to help you discourage retailers and consumers from dealing in
shatoosh products.