Update on the state of elephant poaching and the ivory trade

I was in a trendy, upmarket shopping district of Hong Kong in December 2011, and came across a shop selling ivory products, beautifully hand-carved.

All the signs in the shop proclaimed that the ivory was from mammoth tusks excavated in Siberia.

That raises two questions for me:

1. How do we know that they don't sell elephant ivory under the counter, or even over the counter?
2. Can mammoth ivory be a sustainable and more desirable raw material, if marketed correctly ("buy the ivory of an extinct species, own a piece of history blah blah")?
 
1. You don't. And can you tell the difference between mammoth and elephant ivory?

2. Mammoth Ivory can never be sustainable, in the true sense of the word - it will run out at some point.

:p

Hix
 
1. You don't. And can you tell the difference between mammoth and elephant ivory?

2. Mammoth Ivory can never be sustainable, in the true sense of the word - it will run out at some point.

:p

Hix

1. I can't tell the difference, but there must be a sure-fire testing and certification process - like carbon 14 dating or something.

2. True - kind of like diamonds, gold and oil. We always seem to keep finding new deposits as the market prices increase, making exploration and recovery more viable though.

On a side note, aren't hippo teeth made of ivory? How come they aren't being poached as much as elephants? Or maybe they are, and only the elephants get the media coverage?
 
Back
Top