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Understanding why consumers in China ‘switch’ between wild, farmed and synthetic bear bile products

Abstract:
An important rationale for legally-farmed and synthetic wildlife products are that they reduce illegal wild-sourced trade by supplying markets with sustainable alternatives. For this to work, more established illegal-product consumers must switch to legal alternatives than new legal-product consumers drawn to illegal wild products. Despite widespread debate on the magnitude and direction of switching, studies among actual consumers are lacking. We used an anonymous online survey of 1421 Traditional Chinese Medicine consumers in China to investigate switching between legal farmed, synthetic, and illegal wild bear bile. We examined past consumption behaviour, and applied a discrete choice experiment framed within worsening hypothetical disease scenarios, using latent class models to investigate groups with shared preferences. Bear bile consumers (86% respondents) were wealthier, more likely to have family who consumed bile, and less knowledgeable about bile treatments than non-consumers. Consumer preferences were heterogenous but most consumers preferred switching between bile types as disease worsened. We identified five distinct latent classes within our sample: ’law-abiding consumers’ (34% respondents), who prefer legal products and were unlikely to switch; two ‘all-natural consumer’ groups (53%), who dislike synthetics but may switch between farmed and wild products; and two ‘non-consumer’ groups (12%) who prefer not to buy bile. People with past experience of bile consumption had different preferences than those without. Willingness to switch to wild products was related to believing they were legal, although the likelihood of switching was mediated by preferences for cheaper products sold in legal, familiar places. We show that consumers of wild bile may switch, given the availability of a range of legal alternatives, while legal-product consumers may switch to illegal products if the barriers to doing so are small. Understanding preferences that promote or impede switching should be a key consideration when attempting to predict consumer behaviour in complex wildlife markets.
Publication status:
Published
Peer review status:
Peer reviewed

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Publisher copy:
10.1111/cobi.13895

Authors


More by this author
Institution:
University of Oxford
Division:
MPLS
Department:
Zoology
Oxford college:
Worcester College
Role:
Author
ORCID:
0000-0002-5590-7617


Publisher:
Wiley
Journal:
Conservation Biology More from this journal
Volume:
36
Issue:
3
Article number:
e13895
Publication date:
2022-04-29
Acceptance date:
2022-01-19
DOI:
EISSN:
1523-1739
ISSN:
0888-8892


Language:
English
Keywords:
Pubs id:
1233012
Local pid:
pubs:1233012
Deposit date:
2022-01-19

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