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  1. Sep 17, 2023 · The price of an elephant tusk varies greatly depending on its size and quality. On the black market, tusks can fetch up to $1,500 per pound. However, due to international bans on ivory trade, the legal market prices are much lower, averaging around $730 per pound.

  2. Jul 30, 2019 · The global ban on ivory has increased the price of tusks on legitimate and black markets tenfold. Image via Pixabay. Back in 1989, the Convention on the International Trade in Endangered...

  3. Rising prices, along with the disruption to ivory supplies caused by the pandemic, may be a warning sign of increased illicit ivory trade in future, and a threat to the successes in countering elephant poaching in East and southern Africa.

  4. Sep 17, 2023 · The average price of an elephant tusk varies widely depending on its quality and provenance. In legal markets, prices can range from a few hundred dollars for a small tusk to tens of thousands of dollars for a large, high-quality tusk.

  5. The array of objects on offer is staggering, but so is what they’re made from: the tusks of elephants—ivory. “The loss or endangerment of any species has an undeniable ripple effect. Stopping the illegal ivory trade and ending the demand for elephant ivory products will take smart, interconnected efforts across the planet.

  6. Apr 6, 2024 · Tusks and horns: Polished, carved elephant tusks were prestigious gifts and hunting trophies. A massive 16th century ivory oliphant horn with gold mounts brought $447,000 at a 2012 Sotheby‘s auction.

  7. Mar 29, 2017 · The price of ivory in China, the world’s biggest market for elephant tusks, has fallen sharply, which may spell a reprieve from the intense poaching of the past decade.

  8. Aug 12, 2015 · The reason? “Legal” ivory found a way back onto the global market. African countries were granted special permission to auction stockpiles of seized tusks worth millions of dollars.

  9. Oct 19, 2023 · Illegal trade in animal parts is a global problem that's signaling the extinction for many endangered species. Experts estimate that about 25,000 elephants were killed last year alone, for their ivory tusks. The driving economic forces that facilitate the illicit trade are supply and demand.

  10. Sep 9, 2021 · Rising prices, along with the disruption to ivory supplies caused by the pandemic, may be a warning sign of increased illicit ivory trade in future, and a threat to the successes in countering ...