Hunting, Sale, and Consumption of Bushmeat Killed by Lead-Based Ammunition in Benin
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Background on Parent Study
2.2. Study Design
2.3. Study Subjects
2.4. Interview Procedures
2.5. Data Analysis
3. Results
3.1. Hunting of Bushmeat
I have been doing this since I was very young. My father used to do it. I saw my father with his gun. I grew up hunting in my family. […]. We did hunting together [with my father]. We hunted rabbits, agouti, small rodents, squirrels, [and] rats. Based on this [past experience of growing up in a family who hunted small animals] we started hunting. Today there are big wild animals. We hunt the big animals, for example, deer, antelopes. They are not a lot here, therefore, we go far from here [into the forests]. [...]. We find big animals there. Here [in the neighborhood] we hunt agouti and other small animals. […]. During the day we do hunting of the day and at night we do the night hunting [...]. Because there are nocturnal animals that come out uniquely at night (ID-01H).
I hunt any time, any moment, but when I find the construction work [construction of buildings in the village as a primary paid job] then I don’t hunt otherwise I am always in the jungle to hunt [wild] animals (ID-04H).
I do not have a hunting permit but I hunt under the [informal] collaboration of someone who has a [valid] permit from whom I can buy [hunting] ammunition. I tried many times to get a hunting license but I could not get one. The authorities do not give it easily. So I buy the cartridges [shotgun shells] from the person who has a license to sale [shotgun shells] and hunts [wild animals]. They will sell it to you if you don’t misuse it. You do not use it for wrong purposes like theft or killing someone. It is much regulated. Once I buy the cartridge [shotgun shells] I am not allowed to sell them to someone else. Everybody [without a valid permit] cannot buy it, it’s not like you go there and they will sell it to you. You need to know someone who could help you (ID-O2H).
When we prepare the meat we take out the skin and cut the meat into pieces, we do not remove the part where the bullet [shot] has entered. Sometimes when we eat the meat [after cooking] we find it [lead fragment] during consumption. But if the animal is wounded extremely, we remove the wound where the bullet [shot] has entered otherwise we keep it [wound] for consumption (ID-04H).
3.2. Sale of Bushmeat
I have friends who do hunting, I go to their place to buy their hunted meat and resell it to the consumers in restaurants and hotels. I do not prepare it myself, I just buy it from the hunters and sell it like that [raw and unprepared] to the clients who will prepare it [themselves] and sell it [to the bushmeat consumers] (ID-05S).
I was born into this business, my mother also sold bushmeat. I learned it from her and started selling bushmeat at a very early age. […]. There are many people that are looking for this type of meat. [...]. I extend my work also in Cotonou and Allada. […]. I have other friends as well who prepare it for sale. The business is quite good. I have clients in Cotonou, Allada and even in Sekou who come here and pay me for buying it (ID-03S).
I used to sell it every day but due to the epidemic of Ebola and Lassa we left it, now I sell nothing when they talked about rats and these diseases we had to stop everything. […]. It has been at least nine months. When there was one case of Lassa in the North people stopped it. Now hunters hardly find it. Now we consume pork and mutton (ID-07S).
When we buy it from the hunters I prepare it here; my wife also prepares it. It should be cooked well with spices [...] it is that [spices] which attract the clients, they will eat it well [with satisfaction]. If it’s not prepared well they will not eat it […] when they [women who prepare the meat] take out the skin, the place where the meat is hit by the bullet [shot], we take that part out because if it is not prepared well and if the consumers find the shot [lead] there (in the meat), they will not come to eat at your place anymore. We prepare that part very well otherwise the consumers will not buy it (ID-03S).
3.3. Bushmeat Consumption
Yes, we sometimes eat agoutis, partridge, [and] rabbit. All the family members [including children] eat it [bushmeat] […] now we do not eat [bushmeat] a lot because I don’t find time to go and kill [wild] animals so when I get it [bushmeat] from the people who hunt them [wild animals], I buy it and it’s [bushmeat consumption] not very frequent […] We eat it less than 2 times per month (ID-04F).
Sometimes we eat the meat of partridge and agouti [rat] killed through hunting by my husband. Sometimes when my husband went out hunting he hunted birds, my husband brought them home, [and] I prepared and ate them. The children also eat it […]. When my husband doesn’t find time to go hunting we find it through other people who sell it. When my husband [after purchasing the wild animal] brings it home, I prepare it and we eat it [together]. […]. Sometimes we eat it once a month (ID-02F).
I put water [in a pot] on fire to boil it well, then add meat in the water. Next is removing the skin, Umm [next] cutting the meat in to small pieces after chopping the whole meat and then I look for any bad elements inside, if I find something bad I remove it, after cutting in to small pieces I mix some spices and then heat it very well so no there is no bad effects on health (ID-10F).
After removing the skin, I remove the part affected by the bullet [shot], I separate it and put it in the highly heated oil in order to prepare [cook] it well and get rid of any bad effect of the bullet [shot] on the meat (ID-14F).
4. Discussion
4.1. Controlling Bushmeat Hunting and Sale
4.2. Replacement of Pb Ammunition
4.3. Removal of the Meat around the Shot Channel
4.4. Reducing Bushmeat Consumption and Promoting Alternative Food Sources
4.5. Strengths and Limitation
4.6. Research Needs
5. Conclusions
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Ahmadi, S.; Maman, S.; Zoumenou, R.; Massougbodji, A.; Cot, M.; Glorennec, P.; Bodeau-Livinec, F. Hunting, Sale, and Consumption of Bushmeat Killed by Lead-Based Ammunition in Benin. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2018, 15, 1140. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph15061140
Ahmadi S, Maman S, Zoumenou R, Massougbodji A, Cot M, Glorennec P, Bodeau-Livinec F. Hunting, Sale, and Consumption of Bushmeat Killed by Lead-Based Ammunition in Benin. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2018; 15(6):1140. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph15061140
Chicago/Turabian StyleAhmadi, Shukrullah, Suzanne Maman, Roméo Zoumenou, Achille Massougbodji, Michel Cot, Philippe Glorennec, and Florence Bodeau-Livinec. 2018. "Hunting, Sale, and Consumption of Bushmeat Killed by Lead-Based Ammunition in Benin" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 15, no. 6: 1140. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph15061140
APA StyleAhmadi, S., Maman, S., Zoumenou, R., Massougbodji, A., Cot, M., Glorennec, P., & Bodeau-Livinec, F. (2018). Hunting, Sale, and Consumption of Bushmeat Killed by Lead-Based Ammunition in Benin. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 15(6), 1140. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph15061140