4.3 Article

The global magnitude and implications of legal and illegal wildlife trade in China

Journal

ORYX
Volume 56, Issue 3, Pages 404-411

Publisher

CAMBRIDGE UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1017/S0030605320000800

Keywords

Biodiversity conservation; China; CITES; enforcement; illegal wildlife trade; regulation; wildlife products

Funding

  1. Sun Yat-sen University [18841200]
  2. National Natural Science Foundation of China [41180944]

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China is one of the largest consumer markets in the international legal and illegal wildlife trade, posing a threat to global biodiversity. Analysis of data from 1997 to 2016 shows a significant extraction of wildlife for the Chinese market, urging regulators and enforcers to take urgent action to disrupt the supply chain.
China is one of the largest consumer markets in the international legal and illegal wildlife trade. An increasing demand for wildlife and wildlife products is threatening biodiversity, both within China and in other countries where wildlife destined for the Chinese market is being sourced. We analysed official data on legal imports of CITES-listed species in five vertebrate classes (mammals, reptiles, amphibians, birds and fish), and on enforcement seizures of illegally traded wildlife, during 1997-2016. This is the first study that collates and analyses publicly available data on China's legal and illegal wildlife trade and considers a broad range of species. Specifically, we estimated the scale and scope of the legal and illegal wildlife trade, quantified the diversity of species involved, and identified the major trading partners, hotspots and routes associated with illegal trade. Our findings show that substantial quantities of wildlife have been extracted globally for the Chinese market: during 1997-2016 over 11.5 million whole-organism equivalents and 5 million kg of derivatives of legally traded wildlife, plus over 130,000 illegally traded animals (alive and dead) and a substantial amount of animal body parts and products, were imported into China. Although measures to reduce demand and alleviate poverty are crucial to curb unsustainable and illegal wildlife trade in the longer term, China's wildlife regulators and enforcers must take urgent measures to disrupt the supply chains from source to market.

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