DiscoverEnvironmentIllegal Wildlife Trade Is Booming. What Does That Mean For The Confiscated Animals?
Illegal Wildlife Trade Is Booming. What Does That Mean For The Confiscated Animals?

Illegal Wildlife Trade Is Booming. What Does That Mean For The Confiscated Animals?

Update: 2024-06-10
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Wildlife trafficking is one of the largest and most profitable crime sectors in the world. The illegal trade estimated to be a multi-billion dollar industry. On a high level, that illegal trade causes problems for everything from global biodiversity to local economies and the balance of entire ecosystems. And on the immediate level, authorities are tasked with caring for confiscated animals and placing them in long-term care facilities.

One network launched last year by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and the Association for Zoos and Aquariums hopes to help. And with wildlife trafficking surging globally, the organizations are now in talks to expand the program to other parts of the country.

Read more about illegal wildlife trafficking and check out more photos in climate correspondent Nate Rott's full story.

Have other wildlife stories you want us to cover? Email us at shortwave@npr.org.

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Illegal Wildlife Trade Is Booming. What Does That Mean For The Confiscated Animals?

Illegal Wildlife Trade Is Booming. What Does That Mean For The Confiscated Animals?