Giant clam shells worth $33m seized in Palawan province

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The giant clam shells, weighing a total of about 200 tonnes, that were seized in a raid at the remote Green Island in Palawan province on Friday. Giant clam shells have been used as a substitute for ivory after a global crackdown in the trade of elep

The giant clam shells, weighing a total of about 200 tonnes, that were seized in a raid at the remote Green Island in Palawan province on Friday. Giant clam shells have been used as a substitute for ivory after a global crackdown in the trade of elephant tusks, conservationists say.

PHOTO: AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE

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MANILA • The Philippine authorities yesterday said they have seized about 200 tonnes of illegally harvested giant clam shells worth nearly US$25 million (S$33 million), in one of the biggest known operations of its kind in the country.
Conservationists have expressed alarm over the surging illicit trade in the endangered creatures, which have been used as a substitute for ivory after a global crackdown in the trade of elephant tusks.
The Philippines is home to most of the world's giant tropical clam species, and Friday's raid took place in the western province of Palawan, considered a poaching hotbed.
The coast guard said four suspects were arrested on the remote Green Island in the Sulu Sea, and the operation turned up the largest ever giant clam shell haul by law enforcers in the area.
"Taking the giant clams from their natural habitat is a form of inter-generational crime," Mr Jovic Fabello, spokesman for the Palawan Council for Sustainable Development, told Agence France-Presse. "It will permanently affect the marine ecosystem and future generations will be deprived of the benefits accruing from it."
He said the seized shells included those of the Tridacna gigas, the world's largest clam.
Growing up to 1.3m wide and weighing up to 250kg, they host marine algae, which are a basic food source for many of the fish species consumed by humans.
Conservationists say giant clam shells are used as an alternative material for products ranging from earrings to chandeliers as ivory becomes scarce.
Mr Fabello said the illegal trade in giant clams has been growing in Palawan and other areas of the Philippines in the past three years.
Killing endangered species is punishable by up to 12 years in jail and fines of up to a million pesos (S$27,600) under the country's Wildlife Protection Act.
"These people are digging up giant clams and killing them," said Mr Fabello.
The coast guard estimated the value of the latest haul at 1.2 billion pesos. This dwarfed the previous Palawan record of 80 tonnes of giant clam shells worth US$3.3 million that were seized early last month from Johnson Island, near the venue of Friday's raid.
AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE

  • 1.3m

Maximum known width of Tridacna gigas, the world's largest clam, which was among the clam shells that were seized.

250kg

Maximum known weight of Tridacna gigas.
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