Chinese Pangolin

№ 96 of 100

Critically EndangeredMammal · Pangolin

Chinese Pangolin

Manis pentadactyla

A burrowing engineer whose abandoned tunnels shelter dozens of other species — emptied from their forests by relentless demand for their scales.

Estimated remaining Unknown — functionally extinct in much of China Declining
Range
ChinaTaiwanVietnamNepalIndiaMyanmar
Region
Asia
Habitat
Subtropical forest and grassland burrows from the Himalayas to southern China

The story

The Chinese pangolin digs deep insulated burrows that whole communities of animals inherit. Decades of harvesting made them functionally extinct across much of China, though Taiwan offers a counter-story: with strong protection it hosts the world's densest pangolin population.

What's killing them

  • Poaching for scales and meat
  • Demand from traditional medicine
  • Habitat fragmentation
  • Slow reproduction — one pup a year

Who's fighting for them

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Quick answers

How many Chinese Pangolins are left in the world?

Approximately Unknown — functionally extinct in much of China. The Chinese Pangolin (Manis pentadactyla) is listed as Critically Endangered on the IUCN Red List, and their population trend is declining. Figures are estimates compiled from the IUCN Red List and conservation organisations.

Where does the Chinese Pangolin live?

The Chinese Pangolin is found in China, Taiwan, Vietnam, Nepal, India, Myanmar (Asia). Their habitat: Subtropical forest and grassland burrows from the Himalayas to southern China.

Why is the Chinese Pangolin endangered?

The main threats to the Chinese Pangolin are: Poaching for scales and meat; Demand from traditional medicine; Habitat fragmentation; Slow reproduction — one pup a year.

Who is working to save the Chinese Pangolin?

Organisations working on Chinese Pangolin conservation include TRAFFIC — Wildlife Trade Monitoring Network; Wildlife Conservation Society; International Union for Conservation of Nature — Species Survival Commission.