Global Wildlife Trade is an Enormous Market – the US Imports Billions of Animals From Nearly 30,000 Species

The largest number of imported species are birds – 4,985 different species are imported each year.
The largest number of imported species are birds – 4,985 different species are imported each year.
Philippe Degroote/Envato
Share
The largest number of imported species are birds – 4,985 different species are imported each year.
The largest number of imported species are birds – 4,985 different species are imported each year.
Philippe Degroote/Envato
Global Wildlife Trade is an Enormous Market – the US Imports Billions of Animals From Nearly 30,000 Species
Copy

When people think of wildlife trade, they often picture smugglers sneaking in rare and endangered species from far-off countries. Yet most wildlife trade is actually legal, and the United States is one of the world’s biggest wildlife importers.

New research that we and a team of colleagues published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences shows that, over the last 22 years, people in the U.S. legally imported nearly 2.85 billion individual animals representing almost 30,000 species.

Some of these wild animals become pets, such as reptiles, spiders, clownfish, chimpanzees and even tigers. Thousands end up in zoos and aquariums, where many species on display come directly from the wild.

Medical research uses macaque monkeys and imports up to 39,000 of them every year. The fashion trade imports around 1 million to 2 million crocodile skins every year. Hunting trophies are also included in wildlife.

The largest number of imported species are birds – 4,985 different species are imported each year, led by Muscovy ducks, with over 6 million imported. Reptiles are next, with 3,048 species, led by iguanas and royal pythons. These largely become pets.

Read the full article on The Conversation.

After requesting more time, Mayor Ken Hopkins is expected to propose significant cuts and potential layoffs
With assisted migration, humans help move plant species into areas more suitable for their growth. But are there potential downsides to this human-led movement?
A $300 million payment dispute and a 2024 blade failure fuel a high-stakes legal fight over the future of the project
Getting up the East Side once meant horses, cable cars and ingenuity. Now, it usually means walking
The power politics of a vacancy on Rhode Island’s highest court
The explosion, which sent 13 people to the hospital, was caused by ethanol vapors accumulating in an oven, according to the Rhode Island State Fire Marshal