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  • Sharon Guynup, Mongabay

    Brazilian Amazon Drained of Millions of Wild Animals by Criminal Networks

    August 18, 2020 By Wilson Center Staff
    shutterstock_495935098

    The original version of this article, by Sharon Guynup, appeared on Mongabay.

    The Brazilian Amazon is hemorrhaging illegally traded wildlife according to a new report released last month. Each year, thousands of silver-voiced saffron finches and other songbirds, along with rare macaws and parrots, are captured, trafficked and sold as pets. Some are auctioned as future contestants in songbird contests. Others are exported around the globe.

    Fish bound for ornamental home aquariums also pour out of the Amazon, including the tiny, iridescent blue and red cardinal tetra. Arapaima fish — also known as pirarucù, one of the world’s largest freshwater fish — are caught illegally, “laundered” amidst captive-bred specimens and shipped to the U.S. in large numbers.

    Other fish are headed for the dinner table, as are freshwater turtles and their eggs, while tapir, peccary, and other mammals are sold in Brazil as bushmeat. Jaguar teeth, heads and skins are shipped to China.

    Millions of animals are being illegally captured and traded live and in parts in a thriving Brazilian black market, according to the report, produced by TRAFFIC, a UK-based nonprofit that studies the trade. “The pervasive and uncontrolled capture of wild animals and plants for the illegal trade is having grave consequences for Brazilian biodiversity, the national economy, the rule of law and good governance,” it says.

    Continue reading on Mongabay.

    Sources: Mongabay, TRAFFIC. 

    Photo Credit: Shutterstock.com, All Rights Reserved. 

    Topics: Brazil, global health, protected areas, wildlife trafficking

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