资讯

A practical guide presents step-by-step information to help timber importers and exporters along the Cameroon to EU supply ...
People are dying, daily life is being fragmented, businesses are failing, families and communities are suffering and there is enormous uncertainty about when things will begin to improve, never mind ...
our diverse and skilled global team 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 ...
Within the context of the COVID-19 pandemic and growing attention to zoonotic disease emergence, health experts and thought-leaders continue to examine how the interactions between humans, wildlife ...
Chasing Payments: Latest analysis exposes financial underbelly of global wildlife crime March 18, 2021- Cambridge, United Kingdom The Case Digest- An Initial Analysis of the Financial Flows and ...
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 ...
Renewed game plan needed to tackle Southeast Asia’s wildlife trafficking problem Petaling Jaya, Malaysia, 20th February 2020 —Some 900,000 pangolins trafficked globally with significant proportions ...
Download Factsheet A new TRAFFIC rapid analysis of confiscations in the region, released today on World Pangolin Day, looked at 1,141 seizure incidents involving both African and Asian pangolin ...
Illegal trade: a conservation crisis The global trafficking of wild species is expanding, driving many species towards extinction and threatening global security and public health Illegal trade of ...
These are just some of the shocking revelations contained in a new report, Empty Shells: An assessment of abalone poaching and trade from southern Africa, published today by TRAFFIC, the international ...
Species and landscapesSpecies and landscapes we work with The global trade in wild species involves thousands of different species, environments, commodities, supply chains, and consumer markets.
Telling species apart is a challenge for enforcement officers, especially those whose primary task isn’t solely focused on detecting smuggled wildlife or those who have not been trained in this skill, ...