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Global Wildlife Trade Fuels Extinction Crisis
24 Dec
Summary
- Legal wildlife trade is 10 times larger than illegal trade.
- Lack of oversight risks driving species to extinction.
- AI and isotopes aid in combating illegal wildlife trafficking.

A groundbreaking study reveals the staggering scale of the global wildlife trade entering the U.S., operating largely in the shadows. Research mapping two decades of data shows the volume of wildlife shipped across borders far exceeds previous estimates, with minimal regulation. The legal trade alone is an enormous industry, valued at an estimated $360 billion annually, and is conducted with concerningly little oversight regarding harvest sustainability.
This unchecked trade presents a direct threat to biodiversity and environmental stability, akin to unraveling a complex ecosystem. It also serves as a conduit for invasive species and diseases, such as a deadly fungus linked to frog imports that has caused extinctions. Furthermore, these trade networks are frequently intertwined with organized crime operations involved in illicit activities.
While the challenge is immense, technological advancements offer hope. AI is now employed to identify wildlife trafficking hotspots at airports, detecting patterns missed by human investigators. Innovative methods, like injecting radioactive isotopes into rhino horns in South Africa, aim to render them traceable and unsellable. Concurrently, legislative actions, such as bans on endangered species parts sales, are closing demand loopholes.




