Investigating the Extent and Nature of the Primate Pet Trade on TikTok

With the online wildlife trade and the demand for viral videos increasing, the trade in primates on TikTok is becoming more prevalent. Despite wildlife trading being banned on most social media platforms, the trade in primates persists. TikTok’s policies ban the sale of live animals, and specific te...

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Main Authors: Daisy Collins, Marco Campera
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2024-09-01
Series:Conservation
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2673-7159/4/4/33
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author Daisy Collins
Marco Campera
author_facet Daisy Collins
Marco Campera
author_sort Daisy Collins
collection DOAJ
description With the online wildlife trade and the demand for viral videos increasing, the trade in primates on TikTok is becoming more prevalent. Despite wildlife trading being banned on most social media platforms, the trade in primates persists. TikTok’s policies ban the sale of live animals, and specific terms related to wildlife trading are banned; however, these search-term bans are easy to get around, and sellers are still prolific on the site. This study documented primates for sale on TikTok using the search term “for sale monkey” over a four-month period (from mid-July to mid-November 2023) with the aim of determining how widespread primate trade is on TikTok, the legality of advertisements, and which countries advertise the most primates for sale. In total, 43 individual advertisements were identified, spanning six different genera of primates and five different countries. Spider monkeys, rhesus macaques, and common marmosets were found to be the most commonly advertised species on TikTok. All the spider monkeys were advertised from the USA, while the majority of the marmosets were advertised from the UK, and all of the rhesus macaques were advertised from Pakistan. The USA was the only country identified in this study that advertised a range of species, and the only species found in this study that was not advertised in the USA was the mona monkey. In total, 44% of all species recorded were classified as either Endangered or Critically Endangered, and it was found that Endangered species were more frequently sold illegally than non-Endangered species. The findings of this study underline a need for stricter primate legislation and wildlife law enforcement, especially if the UN’s sustainable development goals are to be achieved by 2030. They also show a need for TikTok to broaden their restrictions on wildlife trading on their app.
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spelling doaj-art-fe04703639f34bd7bfc563c64e5a33392025-08-20T02:57:07ZengMDPI AGConservation2673-71592024-09-014454755910.3390/conservation4040033Investigating the Extent and Nature of the Primate Pet Trade on TikTokDaisy Collins0Marco Campera1Department of Biological and Medical Sciences, Oxford Brookes University, Oxford OX3 0BP, UKDepartment of Biological and Medical Sciences, Oxford Brookes University, Oxford OX3 0BP, UKWith the online wildlife trade and the demand for viral videos increasing, the trade in primates on TikTok is becoming more prevalent. Despite wildlife trading being banned on most social media platforms, the trade in primates persists. TikTok’s policies ban the sale of live animals, and specific terms related to wildlife trading are banned; however, these search-term bans are easy to get around, and sellers are still prolific on the site. This study documented primates for sale on TikTok using the search term “for sale monkey” over a four-month period (from mid-July to mid-November 2023) with the aim of determining how widespread primate trade is on TikTok, the legality of advertisements, and which countries advertise the most primates for sale. In total, 43 individual advertisements were identified, spanning six different genera of primates and five different countries. Spider monkeys, rhesus macaques, and common marmosets were found to be the most commonly advertised species on TikTok. All the spider monkeys were advertised from the USA, while the majority of the marmosets were advertised from the UK, and all of the rhesus macaques were advertised from Pakistan. The USA was the only country identified in this study that advertised a range of species, and the only species found in this study that was not advertised in the USA was the mona monkey. In total, 44% of all species recorded were classified as either Endangered or Critically Endangered, and it was found that Endangered species were more frequently sold illegally than non-Endangered species. The findings of this study underline a need for stricter primate legislation and wildlife law enforcement, especially if the UN’s sustainable development goals are to be achieved by 2030. They also show a need for TikTok to broaden their restrictions on wildlife trading on their app.https://www.mdpi.com/2673-7159/4/4/33social mediainternetonlinemarmosetmacaquespider monkey
spellingShingle Daisy Collins
Marco Campera
Investigating the Extent and Nature of the Primate Pet Trade on TikTok
Conservation
social media
internet
online
marmoset
macaque
spider monkey
title Investigating the Extent and Nature of the Primate Pet Trade on TikTok
title_full Investigating the Extent and Nature of the Primate Pet Trade on TikTok
title_fullStr Investigating the Extent and Nature of the Primate Pet Trade on TikTok
title_full_unstemmed Investigating the Extent and Nature of the Primate Pet Trade on TikTok
title_short Investigating the Extent and Nature of the Primate Pet Trade on TikTok
title_sort investigating the extent and nature of the primate pet trade on tiktok
topic social media
internet
online
marmoset
macaque
spider monkey
url https://www.mdpi.com/2673-7159/4/4/33
work_keys_str_mv AT daisycollins investigatingtheextentandnatureoftheprimatepettradeontiktok
AT marcocampera investigatingtheextentandnatureoftheprimatepettradeontiktok