The Eastern Ghats are a discontinuous chain of mountain ranges in South India. The Indian pangolin Manis crassicaudata, categorized as Endangered on the IUCN Red List, inhabits these human-dominated landscapes, especially where there is an abundant supply of ants and termites. A survey during August 2020–July 2021 of households in 21 villages in the region, outside protected areas, revealed that promulgation, through social media, of local beliefs that pangolins can produce electricity, is leading to increased demand for pangolin scales, and may be contributing to a decline in this species across the region.
Our survey revealed that the high economic value of the scales has resulted in increased hunting and trapping of pangolins. The scales are sold for USD 500–1,000 per kg on the local black market, and are used to make pendants to deter evil spirits, although this use is not apparently prevalent amongst the younger generation. It was also reported to us that some remote tribal communities use the scales as earrings, and that pangolin meat is consumed in some areas.
There are claims that pangolins produce a mysterious energy and can emit electrical sparks when the keratinised scales are probed with a testing screwdriver. Videos of the light of a testing screwdriver glowing when used to probe a pangolin's scales have been circulating on various social media platforms. Pangolins do not generate electricity and the screwdriver was presumably rigged to produce the glow. Our interviews also revealed another popular myth about pangolins: that forest fires can be caused by a pangolin rubbing its scales against dry grass or leaf litter in summer.
Beliefs and myths about the pangolin's mystical powers and medicinal value are part of the culture of the Eastern Ghats, and will need to be addressed as part of conservation efforts to halt the illegal trade in this species. Although education and awareness programmes can help instruct people about the ecological significance and conservation status of the Indian pangolin, tailored behaviour change campaigns through community outreach and engagement are required, along with proactive law enforcement measures, to influence behaviour and decision-making processes for reduction of anthropogenic pressures on the Indian pangolin in the Eastern Ghats.
We thank the Andhra Pradesh Forest Department and Save Pangolins for their support and encouragement.