Ivory burns in Kenya
Photo: Daniel Stiles
6 March 2018

Media coverage of the torching of huge caches of ivory presented a strong message against elephant poaching and ivory trade, but many of those who needed to hear it most may not have received it, an international study has found.

University of Queensland researcher Alexander Braczkowski said an examination of the global media coverage of the world’s largest ivory burn in Kenya in 2016 revealed that coverage disproportionately reached western audiences.

Mr Braczkowski, of UQ’s School of Earth and Environmental Sciences, said the study was the first to assess the potential impact of the destruction of more than 105 tonnes of ivory, worth an estimated A$128 million (US$100 million) on the black market.

“Our study found 81 per cent of online media coverage was produced in the United States, which has few elephant poachers and few consumers of illegally-sourced ivory,” Mr Braczkowski said.

“Both print and online media coverage were weaker in ivory-consuming countries such as China, and 59 per cent of Chinese coverage was in English, which may not have reached all target audiences.”

UQ School of Biological Sciences and Griffith University researcher Dr Duan Biggs said with no real measure of the effectiveness of these conservation marketing events, there was no way of judging if they achieved their objectives of reducing ivory demand and supporting elephant conservation.

”If ivory consumers, poachers, dealers and policy makers were the intended audiences, then a strategy of sustained media pressure to extend news coverage to weeks or months may have been  better to effect change.

“These destruction events should also coincide with key meetings of policy makers, with more leaders of source, transit and demand countries invited to attend,” he said.

ARC Centre of Excellence for Environmental Decisions researcher Dr Matthew Holden said governments, donors and NGOs should introduce monitoring around events such as ivory burns.

“There is an urgent need for measures of media reach and of how messages are received, and whether it changes attitudes in ivory demand countries,” Dr Holden said.

“For example, does it cause fluctuations in raw and worked ivory prices, or impact the levels of consumer demand for ivory products?”

The international study, involving researchers in Australia, South Africa, US, Kenya, Tanzania, Japan, Taiwan, UK, and the Philippines,  is published in Conservation Biology (doi: 10.1111/cobi.13097).

Media: Alexander Braczkowski, alexander.braczkowski@gmail.com, @alexbraczkowski, (please note Alexander is currently in the field in Uganda); Dr Duan Biggs, d.biggs@uq.edu.au, +61 7 373 59218, @duanbiggs, Dr Matthew Holden, m.holden1@uq.edu.au, +61 406 557 706, @MattHHolden.