The Telegram (St. John's)

Illegal traffickin­g is stubbornly prevalent, U.N. report says

- REUTERS

In 2015-2021, seizures of 13 million items showed an illegal trade in around 4,000 plant and animal species across 162 countries and territorie­s, the report said.

VIENNA — Illegal traffickin­g of plant and animal wildlife remains stubbornly prevalent, according to a U.N. report on Monday, and it is critical government­s focus on more than just “iconic” species like elephants, where progress had been made.

While seizures reported in 2020 and 2021 were around half that in previous reports, that could be attributed to Covid-linked disruption­s rather than a decline in actual traffickin­g, the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC) World Wildlife Crime Report said.

The study is published every four years and 20202021 were the last years for which data was available.

“Wildlife traffickin­g overall has not been substantia­lly reduced over two decades,” the UNODC said in a statement on the report, calling for measures including better enforcemen­t and implementa­tion of legislatio­n, including anti-corruption laws.

“Thousands of threatened species are affected by wildlife traffickin­g, a small minority of which, such as elephants, tigers and rhinoceros­es, attract the majority of policy attention,” the report said.

Wildlife crime “such as the illegal collection of succulent plants and rare orchids,” and traffickin­g of many kinds of reptile, fish, birds and mammals had played a key role in local or global extinction­s, it said.

In 2015-2021, seizures of 13 million items showed an illegal trade in around 4,000 plant and animal species across 162 countries and territorie­s, the report said. The most common species involved were corals (16 per

crocodnili­adns cent), (9 per cent) and elephants (6 per cent).

A rare bright spot was in efforts to fight traffickin­g in elephant ivory and rhinoceros horn, the report said, pointing to drops in poaching, seizure levels and market prices over the past decade.

 ?? REUTERS ?? A hammerhead shark lies dead at the dock of the Mirissa Fisheries Harbour in south Sri Lanka.
REUTERS A hammerhead shark lies dead at the dock of the Mirissa Fisheries Harbour in south Sri Lanka.

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