Literature DB >> 33277940

A guide to using the internet to monitor and quantify the wildlife trade.

Oliver C Stringham1,2, Adam Toomes1, Aurelie M Kanishka1,3, Lewis Mitchell2, Sarah Heinrich1, Joshua V Ross2, Phillip Cassey1.   

Abstract

The unrivaled growth in e-commerce of animals and plants presents an unprecedented opportunity to monitor wildlife trade to inform conservation, biosecurity, and law enforcement. Using the internet to quantify the scale of the wildlife trade (volume and frequency) is a relatively recent and rapidly developing approach that lacks an accessible framework for locating relevant websites and collecting data. We produced an accessible guide for internet-based wildlife trade surveillance. We detailed a repeatable method involving a systematic internet search, with search engines, to locate relevant websites and content. For data collection, we highlight web-scraping technology as an efficient way to collect data in an automated fashion at regularly timed intervals. Our guide is applicable to the multitude of trade-based contexts because researchers can tailor search keywords for specific taxa or derived products and locations of interest. We provide information for working with the diversity of websites used in wildlife trade. For example, to locate relevant content on social media (e.g., posts or groups), each social media platform should be examined individually via the site's internal search engine. A key advantage of using the internet to study wildlife trade is the relative ease of access to an increasing amount of trade-related data. However, not all wildlife trade occurs online and it may occur on unobservable sections of the internet.
© 2020 Society for Conservation Biology.

Keywords:  big data; comercio en línea; dark web; deep web; e-commerce; macrodatos; mercado de mascotas; pet trade; redes sociales; social media; surface web; web oscura; web profunda; web scraping; web superficial

Year:  2021        PMID: 33277940     DOI: 10.1111/cobi.13675

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Conserv Biol        ISSN: 0888-8892            Impact factor:   6.560


  1 in total

1.  Searching the web builds fuller picture of arachnid trade.

Authors:  Colin T Strine; Alice C Hughes; Benjamin M Marshall; Caroline S Fukushima; Pedro Cardoso; Michael C Orr
Journal:  Commun Biol       Date:  2022-05-19
  1 in total

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