Biology Now, 2e

(Ben Green) #1
The Dirt on Black-Market Plants ■ 293

Gymnosperms produce “naked” seeds that sit


bare, unwrapped in any additional layers, on the


modified leaf (the scale in a pine cone). In angio-


sperms, the modified leaf evolved into the ovary


wall, which consists of tissue layers that enclose and


protect the egg-bearing structures, or ovules. After


fertilization, the ovules develop into seeds, and the


ovary wall that enclosed them becomes the fruit wall.


At the Thailand plant markets, Phelps had trou-


ble identifying orchid species until they flowered,


so he went back again and again—four times per


year to four different markets—looking for newly


opened flowers, listing species he recognized,


taking photos of others, and even occasionally


asking for a flower off a plant he did not recognize,


which he quickly stored in a vial of alcohol to take


back for identification. In the end, Phelps gath-


ered evidence of 348 orchid species in 93 genera,


representing 13–22 percent of the area’s known


orchid flora, and tens of thousands of individual


plants, including several new species.


Phelps’s results were shockingly different


from those published in preexisting government


reports on plant trades among Thailand, Laos,


and Myanmar. The Convention on International


Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and


Flora, or CITES, is an international treaty of over


175 countries that monitors and reg ulates interna-


tional trade of plants and animals. Member coun-


tries are required to produce permits for wildlife


trade of species protected under the agreement,


including all wild orchids. These permits are used


to guarantee that plants are legally harvested in


a sustainable way that does not endanger either


the species or the environment. “CITES is about


conservation and sustainable use,” says Anne St.


John, a biologist with the U.S. Fish and Wildlife


Service’s Division of Management Authority,


which implements CITES in the United States.


“The goal is to ensure that these species are


around for our grandchildren. That includes not


only tigers and elephants, but also bigleaf mahog-


any and Brazilian rosewood.”


And the orchids of Southeast Asia. Over nine


years, Laos reported permits for the export of just


20 wild-collected orchids into Thailand; Myan-


mar reported none. Yet during just one day with


a single market trader at the border between


Laos and Thailand, Phelps documented that the


woman sold at least 168 plants of eight different


genera. In just one day, she sold eight times more


plants than the government reported as sold over


9 years. “It’s totally anecdotal, but incredibly illus-
trative of the problem,” says Phelps. “This trade is
completely unacknowledged. It’s an open secret.”
Other countries are working hard to crack
down on the plant black market. American
ginseng, a short leafy plant with a tan, gnarled
root commonly used in Chinese herbal medi-
cine, is the largest CITES-regulated plant export
of the United States (Figure 16.8). A pound of
quality, dried ginseng can sell for up to $900,
so some people try to bypass CITES permits,
harvesting plants that are too young (legally

Figure 16.8


Ginseng plants carpet a forest floor
After pollination, the ginseng flowers develop a bright-red seed head
that helps ginseng hunters (inset) find it in the filtered light of the forest.

Q1: What feature(s) of the ginseng plant tell you that it is not a
bryophyte?

Q2: What feature(s) of the ginseng plant tell you that it is not a
fern or gymnosperm?

Q3: Because of the CITES classification of ginseng, you are not
allowed to sell plants younger than 5 years even if they grew on your
own land. Do you agree with that law? Why or why not?
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