In Cameroon, bushmeat is not just a food choice but a culturally significant tradition. This report explores how to balance ...
Nature restoration experts from across Europe and beyond recently gathered for a deep examination of the ecological aspects ...
A syndicate supplying hundreds of tortoises to the international illegal trade, another network that snares, dismembers and sells tiger parts and over a thousand wildlife parts found near a national ...
From the pursuit of a smuggling gang to mega wildlife seizures, winners of the inaugural Wildlife Sentinel Awards (WiSe) in the Philippines amply demonstrated the persistence and adaptability required ...
TRAFFIC has over 170 staff working on five continents towards the shared goal of reducing the pressure of unsustainable trade on natural biodiversity. Our team includes experts from a plethora of ...
At a time of unprecedented biodiversity loss, TRAFFIC is scaling up evidence, solutions, and influence to ensure that trade in wild species is legal and sustainable, for the benefit of the planet and ...
If you think you may have encountered illegal wildlife trade online, you can report it directly via the Coalition To End Wildlife Trafficking Online website.
The trade in wild species is complex. Deepen your understanding with our tools and online courses that can help you act on illegal trade and enable you to support legal trade - regardless of whether ...
Wild plants are being illegally harvested at such a rate that, in many cases, their existence is now under threat, with most sales occurring on social media and ecommerce platforms. Demand for wild ...
Our conservation and development work is spread across a combination of ongoing trade monitoring, data gathering, policy engagement and individual projects. In addition to our ongoing trade monitoring ...
Nepal’s Himalayan forests, rich in biodiversity and home to numerous keystone species, are under threat. Overharvesting of wild plants and fungi, climate change, illegal trade, and inequitable supply ...
The 2019 Intergovernmental Panel on Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services (IPBES) Global Assessment identified direct overexploitation as the second most significant cause of biodiversity decline, ...